Louis Braille

Louis Braille
Louis Braille
    Louis Braille
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Louis Braille
    French educator and inventor, born 4 January 1809, at Coupvray, Seine-et-Marne, France; died 6 January, 1852. He became blind when three years of age, and at the age of thirteen was sent to the Institution for the Blind at Paris. There he showed a talent for intellectual studies and for music; when his instruction had been completed he was appointed professor in that institution. It was then that he invented his system of writing in raised or relief points for the blind. Before him, Valentin Haüy, the founder of the Institution for the Blind, had invented the method of printing in raised letters which allowed the blind to read by touch; Charles Barbier had invented a sonographic point system as distinguished from Haüy's line or letter system and had devised a simple instrument by which the blind could emboss the words or print them in relief. But this system of writing, based on the sounds of the French language, was too conventional and did not furnish the signs necessary for punctuation and ciphers. Braille, keeping to Barbier's point system and the principle of relief writing, found the means of representing, by the various combinations of six dots, not of the sounds but the alphabetical letters and all the signs of punctuation, and even of music. This invention, being alphabetic instead of sonographic, was a great advance in the education of the blind, and though it has been modified, at times, as to the combinations of dots (American, English, and English revised systems), the system is still, in most countries, the basis of methods for the education of the blind. The inventor set forth the principles of his system in his work: "Procédé pour écrire les paroles, la musique, et la plein-chant, à l'usage des aveugles", printed in raised letters in 1829. Though this system cannot be said to be the definitive method of education and writing for the blind, the name of Braille will always remain associated with one of the greatest and most beneficent devices ever invented.
    G.M. SAUVAGE
    Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company. . 1910.


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  • Louis Braille — Naissance 4 Janvier 1809 Coupvray Décès 6 Janvier 1852 (à 43 ans) Paris Nationalité …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Louis Braille — Brailleschrift Postkarte zum Int. Blindentag 1915 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Louis Braille — Louis Braille …   Wikipedia Español

  • Louis Braille — Louis Braille(1809 1852), fue un profesor francés famoso por la invencion del sistema de lectura para ciegos que lleva su nombre. Nació en Coupvray, cerca de París (Francia) el 4 de enero de 1809. A la edad de 3 años perdió la vista. Se infectó… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Louis Braille — in French; January 4, 1809 ndash; January 6, 1852) was the inventor of braille [To prevent confusion the proper noun Braille is written in lower case ( braille ) when referring to the writing system. It is also pronounced differently:… …   Wikipedia

  • Louis-Braille-Schule Düren — Schulform Förderschule Gründung 1845 Ort Düren Land Nordrhein Westfalen Staat Deutschland Koordinaten …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Louis Braille — Braille printing …   Inventors, Inventions

  • Louis Braille — noun French educator who lost his sight at the age of three and who invented a system of writing and printing for sightless people (1809 1852) • Syn: ↑Braille • Derivationally related forms: ↑braille (for: ↑Braille) • Instance Hypernyms: ↑ …   Useful english dictionary

  • Louis Braille — 1809 52, en fransk blindepædagog, der selv blev blind i 1812. Han udviklede fra 1824 braille alfabetet …   Danske encyklopædi

  • Louis Braille — n. (1809 1852) French educator (who became blind at the age of three) and inventor of the Braille system for the blind …   English contemporary dictionary

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