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Karl König (25 September 1902 – 27 March 1966) was an Austrian paediatrician who founded the Camphill Movement, an international movement of therapeutic intentional communities for those with special needs or disabilities. ==Biography== König was born in Vienna, Austria-Hungary on 25 September 1902, the only son of a Jewish shoemaker. He studied Medicine at the University of Vienna and graduated in 1927 with a special interest in Embryology. After graduating, he met Ita Wegman, an anthroposophical physician who invited him to work in her institute for people with special needs in Arlesheim, Switzerland. He married Mathilde Maasberg in 1929. Following his work in Arlesheim, König was appointed pediatrician at the Rudolf Steiner-inspired ''Schloß Pilgrimshain'' institute in Strzegom, where he worked until 1936 when he returned to Vienna and set up a successful medical practice. He was forced to flee Vienna to Aberdeen, Scotland in 1938 due to Hitler's invasion of Austria. He was briefly interned due to the outbreak of World War II, but on his release in 1940, he set up the first ''Camphill Community for Children in Need of Special Care'' at Camphill, by Milltimber, on the outskirts of Aberdeen. From the mid-1950s, König set up more communities, including the first to care for those with special needs beyond school age in North Yorkshire. In 1964, König moved to Brachenreuthe, near Überlingen on Lake Constance, Germany, where he set up a community. He died there in 1966. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Karl König」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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