This page is a continuation of the Pantheon Exhibit with specific information about Jean Marc Gaspard Itard.

Jean Marc Gaspard Itard went to Paris in 1796 to study medicine. After becoming an accomplished surgeon, Itard worked at the Paris insane asylum. He was interested in the study of training deaf-mutes, and took an interest in Victor, a boy at the asylum. Victor had been found in the woods around Saint-Sernin in southern France, an apparent “Wild Boy” with virtually no exposure to civilized society.
The Society of Observers of Man claimed the boy for observations. Phillipe Pinel, one of the five observers, delivered his report, saying that Victor was an incurable idiot with no chance for improvement or education. Itard disagreed with Pinel and went against the recommendations, keeping Victor in the asylum and personally training him.
Though never making the progress he had hoped, Itard’s techniques and willingness to stand up for the cause of "Victor the Wild Boy” were very influential to the training and education programs of the time.
In 1825 Itard described the case of Madame de Dampierre who had a habit of shouting out obscene words during conversation. Sixty years later this case was cited as an example of what would become known as Tourette’s syndrome.