The beginnings In 1865, after the
Italian unification, several factors created the need for additional regional hospital capacity. development and enlargement works were completed between 1873 and 1878 (the official opening year). Consequently, thousands of people were admitted. The building facility was shaped like a “village”: it housed patients, scientific laboratories, medical libraries, and areas dedicated to patients, like sewing rooms, craft shops, and gardens. Comparable to every other Italian psychiatric hospital, patients were split into groups according to their behavior, not on their diagnostic category. One of these groups, the "Agitated ones", were kept in isolation, while the rest of them, the majority, were employed in
Occupational therapy activities, the scientific name for working therapy. At the end of the 19th century, after the designation of
Edoardo Gonzales as the new director, theatrical performances and dances were introduced to highlight the significance of "moral education" in mental hospital care. Some journalists who were invited to these events wrote about them later in the local papers. In the early 20th century, Gonzales, who stayed in the position of director for eleven years, built an aqueduct that provided water to the asylum as well as to the town of
Limbiate. In addition to this, he came up with the so-called "children's department", in which a school was equipped with furniture coming from
Montessori, who was a children psychiatrist in the asylum. In the 1920s,
Giuseppe Corberi was entrusted with the "children's department". His daughter, Elisa, who was hardly in her twenties, worked there as a volunteer teacher. The aim of the Psychiatric Hospital was to create a free psychologic-social and cultural environment. The "activities" organized inside the hospital covered different fields of methods, such as artistic, habitational, and recreational. These projects created a deeper connection between the patients and the nature. In 1908 four “open pavilions” were set up without boundary walls; each one was able to host 100 places for sleeping in the neighboring Mombello pinewood, which was already owned by the administrator.
World War I During
World War I, Mombello's director was Giuseppe Antonini. At this time, two pavilions were equipped as military hospitals with care, research, and observation of troops from the front impacted by conflict-related psychological traumas. The “Veneto Pavillion” was built to host 250 war refugees. These independently detached buildings had sleeping accommodations for 200 patients in the army's care. In their first year of activity, 635 soldiers were admitted, and 517 of them were released. On average, 150 in-patients were housed at a time in the asylum, and they were treated through different psychotherapeutic methods, such as clinotherapy (rest therapy), freedom (no forced restraint, such as the use of a
Straitjacket), and a dietary “reforming” regime (this method increased the patient's weight by an average of 10–15 kg). Like the majority of in-patients, soldiers were forced to work, including building a street to connect the control pavilion (south-east) to the “pinewood pavilions”. Soldiers were not the only patients during World War I. After the
Battle of Caporetto, the Military Healthiness Department ordered the emptying of all the psychiatric hospitals in
Venice. The Mombello hospital hosted these displaced patients and other refugees. This function was repeated during World War II and after the
Polesine floods of 1951. In addition to increasing the number of hospital patients, several of the soldiers, doctors, nurses, and employees who were in-patients, then moved to the front. The psychiatrist
Gaetano Perusini (famous for cooperating with Alois Alzheimer to observe and describe "
Alzheimer's disease"), had been a doctor at Mombello before his death in the combat in December 1915, in San Floriano. There was an extraordinary journalistic research in this period: the historian, dialect poet, and painter Antonio Curti, who was friends with
Tranquillo Cremona and with Giuseppe Antonini, visited Mombello on the eve of Italy's entrance to the war to see what internees thought about the conflict. On 5, May 1915, the Milanese newspaper,
La Perseveranza, published the internees' answers, and later, as a separate flyer. During World War I, overcrowding became a problem as the number of inmates exceeded 3000. It was decided to open a few branches in
Busto Arsizio, like the Villa Litta Modignani (1919), later in Contegno (1928) and in
Parabiago with the "Leonardo Bianchi" women's section (1935).
1920s to closure Within the scientific cabinets, the most significant ones were the Pathological Anatomy and Biological Laboratories that together formed the Andrea Verga Institute, the Experimental Psychology Laboratory which was directed by Giuseppe Corberi and the Neurobiological Research Institute in Affori which was directed by Ugo Cerletti, who later discovered the electroshock. Mombello and the young Milanese Institute reached an agreement in 1931 for creating a university department in the asylum (which operated until 1943). The goal was to give the Clinic for Nervous and Mental Diseases (whose director was Carlo Besta) patients to study on. In the school section in Mombello, forty places were available for patients: 20 for men and 20 for women. In this department, many notorious doctors worked, such as Arrigo Frigerio, Davide Alessi, Rinaldo Grisoni and Silvio Brambilla. Following the
World War II, Mombello's fall begun, when the Province of Milan decided to benefit the new department in
Affori, which in 1945 was named after
Paolo Pini, a psychiatrist who died in the same year. With more than 3000 in-patients, Mombello has been one of the largest and most important psychiatric hospitals in Italy. It was visited from the second half of the 19th century by psychiatrists from all over the world: Germany, Romania, Spain, and Egypt. Different painters were welcomed in the Mombello hospital. One of those was Gino Sandri, who drew many paintings inside the asylum. Because many patients were artists, the journalist Antonio Curti renamed the department
“The Brera of Mombello”. The hospital was officially closed in 1978, as a consequence of
Law 180, also known as
Legge Basaglia. This law also closed all the other psychiatric hospitals in
Italy. It subsequently took a further 20 years to discharge every long-term patients and permanently vacate the structure. During the following years of the closing of the hospital, the government tried to preserve the building from an architectural point of view, to commemorate the hospital, the staff and the important role it had in the past.
Gazzetta del Manicomio della Provincia di Milano Mombello The journal was created in 1880 and was published until 1905 every two months and was shipped free to all the communes of the
Province of Milan. For private people, it was possible to subscribe to the journal and receive it at their home address. The newspaper highlighted the movement of admitted people inside the asylum during the period of a year: from January to December, there were registered the incoming, the outcoming and the deaths of the patients. In 1887 the Gazzetta reported on Mombello's presence at the
International Exhibition of Equipment (for grinding, baking, and other associated industries) which was held in Milan in that year. The hospital's attendance at the event underlined and emphasized the connection between psychiatry and hygiene, along with psychiatrists' engagement with the education of the population about socially important health issues, such as
Pellagra. In the hygiene room at the Exposition, several pictures drawn by a patient of the hospital regarding the different phases of the skin disease pellagrous
Erythema, were shown. About 400 free copies of the book Dialoghi written by the writers Edoardo Gonzales and Giovanni Battista Verga (Andrea's nephew) were given to visitors, in order to promote new ways of preventing the Pellagra disease. Gonzales also presented a packed bread with wheat and potato flour. The "Gazzetta" was also used to report the internal situation, mental issues and deaths that occurred over a specific time, other than general problems faced by the doctors, the directors, and the psychiatrists of the hospital itself. == Structure ==