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How Braille was invented | Moments of Vision 9 - Jessica Oreck

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    In a Moment of Vision...
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    Early 1800s.
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    It's the middle of the Napoleonic Wars
    in the middle of Europe,
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    and it's the middle of the night.
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    One Captain Charles Barbier
    of Napolean's army
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    is trying to relay a message
    to one of his troops.
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    But sending written communications
    to the front lines
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    can be deadly for the recipient.
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    Lighting a candle to read the missive can
    give away their positions to the enemy.
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    In a moment of vision,
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    Barbier pokes a series of holes
    into a sheet of a paper with his blade,
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    creating a coded message that can be
    deciphered by fingertip,
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    even in the pitch black.
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    The merits of his so-called night writing
    are never acknowledged by the military,
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    but in 1821, Barbier approaches the
    Royal Institute for Blind Youth in Paris
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    in the hopes that they might find a use
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    for his innovative,
    new communication method.
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    There, a precocious teen by the name
    of Louis Braille does just that.
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    Louis spends the next several years
    improving on Barbier's idea,
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    creating an organized alphabet
    fitting into a six dot standardized cell.
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    The system catches on.
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    Today, Braille is the universally accepted
    system of writing for the blind,
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    adapted for more than 130 languages.
Title:
How Braille was invented | Moments of Vision 9 - Jessica Oreck
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
01:50

English subtitles

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