This article tries to outline the major differences between practices of charity within Europe,
either comparing Catholics to Protestants, or different Catholic areas. The point of departure
is constituted by the study of the Misericórdias, lay confraternities under royal protection who
would develop as one of the main (if not the greatest) dispensers of charity either in Portugal or
its Empire. Its evolution since the formation of the first misericórdia in Lisbon to the end of the
seventeenth century is analysed, relating these confraternities to political, social and religious
changes that occurred in the period under analysis. Issues related to their functioning,
membership, rules, and economic activities, as well as the types of needy they cared for, are also
dealt with, mainly through the comparison of different colonial and metropolitan
misericórdias