Mélanie de Salignac

Mélanie de Salignac (Marennes, Charente-Maritime, 19 January 1744 –1766) was a young French woman whose achievements in the face of her disability - blindness - were mentioned in the accounts of Diderot.[1] She was born blind long before the invention of Braille in 1829, but taught herself to read using cut out card letters and achieved much more through her sense of touch. Diderot wrote about her achievements in his "Addition to the Letter on the Blind".[2] She was born at the Château de Mons (Charente-Maritime), the daughter of financier Pierre Vallet de Salignac (d.1760) and Marie-Jeanne Élisabeth Volland, elder sister of Sophie Volland.[3] Her older brother was the politician Nicolas-Thérèse Vallet de Salignac.

References

  1. Zina Weygand Les aveugles dans la société française: Du Moyen-Age au siècle de ... 2003 - Page 87 "Mélanie de Salignac : Mélanie de Salignac, que Diderot rencontra à plusieurs reprises « pendant un commerce d'intimité qui a commencé avec elle et avec sa famille en 1760 »74, mourut en 1766, à l'âge de vingt-deux ans"
  2. Diderot, Denis. "Diderot's Philosophical Works". Retrieved 2009-05-04.
  3. Zina Weygand The Blind in French Society from the Middle Ages to the Century of ... 2009- Page 70 "... this “special” instruction: a Frenchwoman, mélanie de Salignac (1744–66), daughter of financier Pierre Vallet de Salignac and of Sophie Volland's elder sister, Marie-Jeanne-Elisabeth; an Austrian, Maria-Theresia von Paradis (1759–1824), ...


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