The deaf blacksmith who married in 1576 – and the history of sign as a legal language
-
The deaf blacksmith who married in 1576 – and the history of sign as a legal language
The medieval church’s acknowledgement that signs were equivalent to a spoken language was transformative for deaf people.
by Rosamund Oates
Sign language at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/subjects/search/?query=sign+language -
undefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic
-
The deaf blacksmith who married in 1576 – and the history of sign as a legal language
The medieval church’s acknowledgement that signs were equivalent to a spoken language was transformative for deaf people.
by Rosamund Oates
Sign language at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/subjects/search/?query=sign+language@gutenberg_org
For YOU Mr Dean @adhdeanasl ! -
@gutenberg_org
For YOU Mr Dean @adhdeanasl !@Guillotine_Jones Thanks for sharing that, GJ! @gutenberg_org
-
@Guillotine_Jones Thanks for sharing that, GJ! @gutenberg_org
@adhdeanasl @gutenberg_org
You're so welcome, Mr Dean.
I was just hoping that I could repay a bit of the joy you so frequently bring to me. -
The deaf blacksmith who married in 1576 – and the history of sign as a legal language
The medieval church’s acknowledgement that signs were equivalent to a spoken language was transformative for deaf people.
by Rosamund Oates
Sign language at PG:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/subjects/search/?query=sign+language@gutenberg_org - This is Cool
-
undefined stefano_zan@mastodon.uno shared this topic