Johann Konrad Ammann
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johann Konrad Ammann (1669 - 1724) was a Swiss physician and instructor of the non-verbal deaf persons.
He is often confounded with Johann Conrad Ammann, born 1724 and died 1811 in Schaffhausen.
Johann Konrad Ammann was born at Schaffhausen, Switzerland. After graduating at Basel in 1687 he began to practise at Amsterdam, where he gained a great reputation. He was one of the earliest writers on the instruction of the non-verbal deaf, and first called attention to his method in his Surdus loquens (Amsterdam, 1692), which was often reprinted, and was reproduced by John Wallis in the Philosophical Transactions (1698).
His process consisted principally in exciting the attention of his pupils to the motions of his lips and larynx while he spoke, and then inducing them to imitate these movements, till he brought them to repeat distinctly letters, syllables and words. He died at Warmoud, near Leiden.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
[edit] External links
- John Conrade Amman (sic!), The Talking Deaf Man, 1692 (full text in English by Project Gutenberg)
- Johann Konrad Ammann (1669-1724) in German, French or Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.