hospitaller

listen to the pronunciation of hospitaller
İngilizce - Türkçe
{i} hastane rahibi
{i} hayır işlerine bakan rahip
hospitaler
bazı Londra hastanelerinde baş rahip
İngilizce - İngilizce
A member of any of several religious orders that cared for the sick in hospitals
A person who attends visitors in a religious institution
A person who attends visiters in a religious institution
{i} person who belonged to a religious military group that was founded in Jerusalem in the 12th century by European crusaders to take care for needy and sick pilgrims; person who is a member of a religious order who resides in a hospital in order to care for the needy and sick
A hospitaller
hospitalist
hospitaler
One residing in a hospital, for the purpose of receiving the poor, the sick, and strangers
hospitaler
{i} person who belonged to a religious military group that was founded in Jerusalem in the 12th century by European crusaders to take care for needy and sick pilgrims; person who is a member of a religious order who resides in a hospital in order to care for the needy and sick
hospitaler
They were called Knights of St
hospitaler
John of Jerusalem, and after the removal of the order to Malta, Knights of Malta
hospitaler
One of an order of knights who built a hospital at Jerusalem for pilgrims, A
of Rhodes and of Malta. Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jeru
or Hospitallers in full (since 1961) Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta. Religious order founded at Jerusalem in the 11th century to care for sick pilgrims. Recognized by the pope in 1113, the order built hostels along the routes to the Holy Land. The Hospitallers acquired wealth and lands and began to combine the task of tending the sick with waging war on Islam, eventually becoming a major military force in the Crusades. After the fall of the crusader states, they moved their headquarters to Cyprus and later to Rhodes (1309). They ruled Rhodes until it fell to the Turks in 1523; thereupon they moved to Malta, where they ruled until their defeat by Napoleon I in 1798. In 1834 they moved to their present headquarters in Rome
hospitaller