Jean Massieu

Jean Massieu (French: [ʒɑ̃ masjø]; 1772 July 21, 1846) was a pioneering deaf educator. One of six deaf siblings, he was denied schooling until age thirteen when he met Abbé Sicard, who enrolled him in the Bordeaux School for Deaf Children. There he learned to read and write French, and later helped develop the first formalized French Sign Language. He taught at the famous school for the deaf in Paris where Laurent Clerc was one of his students. He began work after a scandal in Paris in Rodez and dedicated his life to educating deaf children. Later he founded a deaf school in Lille, France.

Jean Massieu
Teacher, School founder
Born1772
Semens, France
DiedJuly 21, 1846

Film

Jean Massieu is portrayed in the fictional film Sign Gene, the superhero film about deaf mutants who have superpowers through the use of sign language, as the fourth great-grandfather of Kate Massieu (played by Carola Insolera) the girlfriend of the leading character Tom Clerc, descendant of Laurent Clerc. The film is written and produced by Emilio Insolera and was screened in cinemas in September 2017.[1]

Quotes attributed to him

  • "Let the Englishman have his coffee, and let me have my ham."—Jean Massieu
  • "Gratitude is the memory of the heart", which has become a proverb in the French language.
gollark: Fortunately, TLS 1.3, the best TLS, dropped this, and now *all* is AES/ChaCha20.
gollark: TLS kept terrible cryptographic algorithms around for ages for backward compatibility, for instance.
gollark: Well, the interface might not be identical, they could just do similar things.
gollark: Also, there are "legacy algorithms" a bit, when you have to keep something around even though it's bad for backward compatibility and such.
gollark: Maybe there should be those things.

See also

References


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