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Cochin Hospital in Paris

Patrimoine classé
Hôpital
Paris

Cochin Hospital in Paris

    111 Boulevard de Port-Royal
    75014 Paris

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1780
Foundation of the San Jacques Hospice
1784
Opening of the Capuchin Hospital
1902
Fusion with Ricord Hospital
1908-1926
Reconstruction of the current hospital
1978
Call from Cochin
2002
Creation of the Cochin Institute
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jean-Denis Cochin - Curé and Founder Created in 1780.
Jacques Chirac - Politician Author of the Call by Cochin (1978).
Bernadette Chirac - Community support Involved in Solenn House (2004).

Origin and history

The Cochin Hospital was founded in 1780, when Jean-Denis Cochin, parish priest of Saint-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas, founded the Saint-Jacques Hospital to welcome the poor and workers of the neighborhood. Thanks to his wealth and donations, he created a 40-bed establishment, which gradually expanded. In 1784, after the closure of the novitiate of the Capuchins, part of the premises became the hospital of the Capuchins (then the hospital of the Midi), dedicated to venereal diseases, because of its southern location in Paris.

In the 19th century, the hospital expanded by integrating several neighbouring structures: the Ricord Hospital (created in 1792 for veneres), the Port Royal maternity (1795), the Baudelocque Clinic (1890), and the Tarnier Hospital (1881). A major reconstruction between 1908 and 1926 gave rise to the current site, marked by its brick pavilion model. The establishment, now linked to the Université Paris-Cité, has 1,483 beds and employs 6,700 professionals, including a biomedical research institute (Institut Cochin, founded in 2002).

The Cochin Hospital is also known for significant events, such as the Call of Cochin (1978), where Jacques Chirac launches a political text from his hospital bed after an accident. The site also houses heritage protections: the Ricord Gate (classified 1942), the Capuchin Fountain (1990), the basement (1999), and the Capuchin Well (2004). Since the 1990s, he has been working with other hospitals (Saint-Vincent-de-Paul, Broca) to form university hospital groups, including the Paris-Centre University Hospital Group (2011).

External links