Johann Wilhelm Klein
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Johann Wilhelm Klein (11 April 1765,
Alerheim Alerheim is a municipality in the district of Donau-Ries in Bavaria in Germany. Mayor In January 2022 Alexander Joas was elected mayor. He succeeded Christoph Schmid, who had been in office since 2008. Sons and daughters of the community * ...
at
Nördlingen Nördlingen (; Swabian: ''Nearle'' or ''Nearleng'') is a town in the Donau-Ries district, in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany, with a population of approximately 20,674. It is located approximately east of Stuttgart, and northwest of Munich. It was ...
- 12 May 1848, Vienna) was a pioneer of education for blind people.


Early life

After his early years he attended high school and then studied law at the Karlsschule in Stuttgart. After completing his studies, earning his living, first as secretary for the princely office in
Upper Alerheim Upper may refer to: * Shoe upper or ''vamp'', the part of a shoe on the top of the foot * Stimulant, drugs which induce temporary improvements in either mental or physical function or both * ''Upper'', the original film title for the 2013 found fo ...
. The Napoleonic conquests brought great misery and destitution to the hometown of Klein. In 1799, he travelled by ship to the Vienna, where he spent the rest of his life. The progressive conditions in Austria under
Emperor Joseph II Joseph II (13 March 1741 – 20 February 1790) was Holy Roman Emperor from 18 August 1765 and sole ruler of the Habsburg monarchy from 29 November 1780 until his death. He was the eldest son of Empress Maria Theresa and her husband, Emperor F ...
may have attracted him. Little is known about the first four years in Vienna. What is known is that he lived in very poor economic conditions, as a tutor to the son of Count of Wallis. Volunteering, he was drafted as a district director for the poor, and so had to deal with many blind people, who made up a large proportion of the poor.


Career

On 13 May 1804 Klein began to teach a young blind man, James Brown, at home, with government support. Thus arose the first blind institute in Germany. Klein's mission in life was now the care of the blind, the education and career guidance to make it in the world of work. in 1807 Klein presented his '' Stachelschrift'', a printing device with which he could type the upper-case letters of the Latin script and create marks in dotted form in the paper. For the blind this writing was not easy to read and to write by hand was hard even for the sighted. Klein rejected Braille because of their dissimilarity from the script of the sighted. In 1826 he erected in
Josefstadt Josefstadt (; ; "Joseph-Town") is the eighth district of Vienna (). It is near the center of Vienna and was established as a district in 1850, but borders changed later. Josefstadt is a heavily populated urban area with many workers and resi ...
a suburb of Vienna, a "supply and employment institution for adult blind". Amidst the turmoil of civil war in 1848, Klein died of pneumonia on 12 May, the age of 83. He was later reburied in a grave of honour at the Vienna Central Cemetery (Group 0, row 1, section 19).


Works

In 1819 he wrote a ''Textbook for Instruction of the Blind'', which was published in Vienna.The Yorkshire Observer, 4 January 1828, p. 74 This was considered as a guide for generations of blind teachers.


Bibliography

* * * * Klein, Johann Wilhelm in Constant of Wurzbach, Biographical Encyclopedia of the Empire, Austria, volume 12, page 51, Vienna, Imperial Court and State Printing 1864 * Karl Heinz Scheible: Johann Wilhelm Klein . In: Wulf-Dietrich Kavasch, Günter Lemke and Albert Schlagbauer (eds): 2002, , pp. 313–357


References


External links

* https://web.archive.org/web/20120221030837/http://www.blind.at/erfahrung.htm * https://web.archive.org/web/20111114001236/http://www.bbi.at/menu/museum.html * * http://www.jwk-akademie.de/ {{DEFAULTSORT:Klein, Johann Wilhelm Education for the blind 1765 births 1848 deaths German educational theorists Deaths from pneumonia in Austria Burials at the Vienna Central Cemetery People from Donau-Ries 18th-century people from the Holy Roman Empire