Pär Aron Borg


Pär Aron Borg was a Swedish pedagogue and a pioneer in the education for the blind and deaf.

Biography

Borg was born in the parish of Avesta in Dalarna, Sweden. After studies at the University of Uppsala, he became a secretary in the Central Government Office in Stockholm.
After having seen a play where a deaf boy communicated by gestures, he was inspired to create a manual alphabet. He began to educate deaf and blind students regularly in 1808. Following the example of l'Abbé de l'Épée founded by Charles-Michel de l'Épée in Paris, in 1809 he founded Allmänna institutet för döfstumma och blinda å Manilla . The institution received support from Queen Hedwig Elizabeth Charlotte. The school had deaf teachers, and the education was given by sign language.
Among his notable students was concert singer, composer and poet Charlotta Seuerling. He was the guardian and mentor of Johanna Berglind, also an important figure in the history of the education of the deaf in Sweden.
Borg made a trip to Portugal in 1823–28, where he founded a school for the deaf; thereby Portugal was given the same manual alphabet as Sweden.
Pär Aron Borg died in 1839 and was succeeded as director of the institute by his son, Ossian Edmund Borg.

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