Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Word Origin Around 1402 the home of a religious community in London was turned into a hospital for the mentally ill. This new hospital kept the name of the community and was known as the Hospital of Saint Mary of Bethlehem.

  2. The earliest known use of the word bedlam is in the Middle English period (11501500). OED's earliest evidence for bedlam is from 1418.

  3. Oct 7, 2017 · bedlam: a place or condition of noise and confusion. ORIGIN. Bedlam, as well as Betleem, Bedleem, Bethlem, etc., were early forms of Bethlehem; for example, in the Early Version (around 1382) of the Wycliffe Bible, the gospel of Luke, 2:4, is:

  4. Bedlam, the first asylum for the mentally ill in England. It is currently located in Beckenham, Kent. The word bedlam came to be used generically for all psychiatric hospitals and sometimes is used colloquially for an uproar. In 1247 the asylum was founded at Bishopsgate, just outside the London.

  5. A corruption of Bethlehem, applied to the Hospital of St Mary of Bethlehem, in Bishopsgate, London, founded as a priory in 1247, which became a hospital for lunatics. From Bedlam are derived such expressions as Tom o'Bedlam and Bess o' Bedlam for wandering lunatics, or beggars posing as lunatics.

  6. Dec 15, 2016 · Designed by Robert Hooke, a City Surveyor, natural philosopher and assistant to Christopher Wren, its 540ft-long (165m) façade – complete with Corinthian columns and cupola-topped turret – was...

  7. May 12, 2022 · You’re probably familiar with the word ‘bedlam’. It’s typically used to describe a particularly chaotic situation, but it suggests rather more than mere chaos. Recounting a situation that was manic and perhaps even a bit dangerous, you might say, with a dash of drama, “it was absolute bedlam ”.