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Night writing
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{{short description|System of code}} {{expand French|date=February 2022}} {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2025}} {{Infobox writing system | name = Night Writing | type = alphabet | typedesc = | time = 1815 | languages = French | fam1 = | fam2 = | children = [[1829 braille|Braille]], [[New York Point]] | creator = | unicode = (not supported) | note = none }} '''Night writing''' is the name given to a form of tactile writing invented by [[Charles Barbier de la Serre]] (1767â1841). It is one of a dozen forms of alternative writing presented in a book published in 1815: ''Essai sur divers procĂ©dĂ©s d'expĂ©ditive française, contenant douze Ă©critures diffĂ©rentes, avec une planche pour chaque procĂ©dĂ©'' (Essay on various processes of French expedition, containing twelve different writings, with a plate for each process).<ref>{{cite web |last=Barbier |first=Charles |year=1815 |title=Essai sur divers procĂ©dĂ©s d'expĂ©ditive française, contenant douze Ă©critures diffĂ©rentes, avec une planche pour chaque procĂ©dĂ© |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lkVzrUr1RvEC |via=Google Books}}</ref> The term (in French: ''Ă©criture nocturne'') does not appear in the book, but was later applied to the method shown on Plate VII of that book. This method of writing with raised dots that could be read by touch was adopted at the Institution Royale des Jeunes Aveugles ([[Royal Institution for Blind Youth]]) in Paris. A student at the school, [[Louis Braille]], used the tools and Barbier's idea of communicating with raised dots in a form of code, and developed a more compact and flexible system for communications, [[Braille]]. == Origin == In 1815, Charles Barbier developed a type of relief writing. This process would be called "night writing". == Function == The principle of night writing is to transcribe using 36 distinct phonetic sounds, each represented by a raised pattern of dots in a 2 Ă 6 grid.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=HnYcBEqziiwC&pg=PA28 Google Books, Livre "les instituts nazareth et Louis Braille... page 28]</ref> The 36 sounds are represented in a 6 Ă 6 table; the 2 Ă 6 grid of dots designates the [[coordinates]] of the desired sound. For example, the sound placed in the first line and the third column of the table is represented by (1, 3). This, in turn, is written with 1 dot in the first column, and 3 dots in the second. {| class="wikitable" ! colspan="7" |Table of correspondance between phoneme and respective coordinates |- ! !1 !2 !3 !4 !5 !6 |- !1 |a |i |o |u |Ă© |Ăš |- !2 |an |in |on |un |eu |ou |- !3 |b |d |g |j |v |z |- !4 |p |t |q |ch |f |s |- !5 |l |m |n |r |gn |ll |- !6 |oi |oin |ian |ien |ion |ieu |} The [[phoneme]] "t" is represented thus: {{Night writing|t|size=40}} Charles Barbier also invented the tools to facilitate this form of writing with raised dots: a shelf ruler that had groups of 6 horizontal grooves. To transcribe their message, the writer uses a punch to pierce the paper, guided by the grooves of the ruler. A movable cursor helps guide the punch. The relief writing appears on the back of the paper; the writing is therefore reversed, hence one must write from right to left. By running their fingers across the front, the recipient of the message counts the number of dots in each row and deduces the nature of the corresponding sound. This was an extraordinary advancement in its time. Previously, the only writing accessible to the blind was one developed by [[Valentin HaĂŒy]], the founder of the [[Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles|Royal Institution for Blind Youth]]. His system impressed the shapes of typographic characters onto wet paper. However, as the embossed letters had to each be distinct, books using the system were cumbersome and of limited length. Furthermore, students had no means to reproduce the method so as to write themselves.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Louis Braille and the Night Writer {{!}} History Today |url=https://www.historytoday.com/louis-braille-and-night-writer |access-date=2023-10-31 |website=www.historytoday.com}}</ref> Barbier's night writing also faced several limitations and imperfections: * no combinations of dots existed to represent punctuation marks, numbers, musical notes, mathematical symbols, etc. * the height of the grid (2 Ă 6 points) made it impossible to read in a single go with one finger * potential information is wasted: a grid of 12 points would theoretically allow up to 2<sup>12</sup> (or 4096) symbols to be represented, when Barbier presented only 36 symbols. == Influence on Braille == In 1815, Barbier published a pamphlet titled ''Essai sur divers procĂ©dĂ©s d'expĂ©ditive française, contenant douze Ă©critures diffĂ©rentes, avec une planche pour chaque procĂ©dĂ©'' (Essay on various processes of French expedition, containing twelve different writings, with a plate for each process). The aim was to present how relief writing, recognisable by touch, could aid the blind. In 1823, Barbier received a bronze medal at Versailles' industrial exposition for having invented this new form of writing which could be read without seeing. Under the administration of Count Alexis de Noailles, his method was adopted by the Royal Institution for Blind Youth. In 1829, Louis Braille published ''ProcĂ©dĂ© pour Ă©crire les paroles, la musique et le plain-chant au moyen de points, Ă lâusage des aveugles et disposĂ©s pour eux'' (Process for writing words, music and plainsong by way of dots, for the use of, and arranged for, the blind). This was based on Barbier's invention but greatly improved its legibility, and the publication marked the official birth of the [[Braille alphabet]]. Louis Braille revised the publication in 1837, and this second edition contained the system now known by the name [[Braille]]. In 1832, Barbier published a new pamphlet, ''Ămancipation intellectuelle dâexpĂ©ditive française'', which stresses that his writing system, though designed for the blind, could also be of use in the army and in hospitals.<ref>{{Cite web| title=Ăcriture pour tous | url=https://www.avh.asso.fr/sites/default/files/2016_charles_barbier.pdf | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170701223219/http://avh.asso.fr/sites/default/files/2016_charles_barbier.pdf | archive-date=2017-07-01}}</ref> ==See also== * [[Nyctography]] * [[New York Point]] ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Braille}} {{Writingsystem-stub}} [[Category:Tactile alphabets]] [[Category:1808 introductions]] [[Category:Writing systems introduced in the 19th century]]
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