Ancient Writing
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Transcript Ancient Writing
Ancient Writing
Invention of Writing
Modern humans began drawing pictures 40,000 years ago
(San in SW Africa, Australian Aborigines, Cro-Magnon in
southwest Europe).
Writing developed on the basis of earlier existing
pictographs and ideographs
True writing is thought to have been invented
independently two or three times in different places and
times in human history:
in ancient Sumeria by 3200 bce -- where cuneiform
developed
in North China by 1200 bce - -the precursor of
modern Chinese characters (may have spread to
China)
in ancient Mexico by the Olmecs before 400 bce--the
precursor to the Maya glyphs (used 200—1500 ce)
Stimulus Diffusion
After the Sumerians, the idea of writing seems to have
diffused to many peoples of Southwest Asia and Egypt.
The Egyptians, the Cretans, the Elamites, and the Indus
Valley peoples developed writing.
Clay inscriptions dating back as far as 2500 bce have
been found in these areas.
It is virtually certain that these peoples borrowed the
idea of writing syllables of sound by using pictures.
THE FERTILE CRESCENT
Divine Invention
Nabu or
Nebo
Babylonian
god of
writing
In Mesopotamia, the Sumerians credit
either the god Enlil or Ningizzida,
Lord of the Tree of Truth, as the
creator of writing.
Later during Assyrian and
Babylonian periods, the god Nabu
was credited as the inventor of writing
and scribe of the gods.
Mesopotamian scribal gods also
exhibit the power of creation via
divine speech.
Divine Invention
Egypt and Phoenicia
In ancient Egypt, the invention
of writing is attributed to the
god Thoth or Tehuti (Dhwty
in Egyptian), the scribe and
historian of the gods, who also
kept the calendar and invented
art and science.
Taautos of Byblos, the
Phoenician precursor of Thoth,
was the father of tautology or
imitation.
The Greeks associated both
gods with their god, Hermes
Characteristics of
Mesopotamian Civilizations
City states
Each city had its own king and patron god or goddess
City states often warred with each other
Theocracy -- king as god’s representative
Hierosgamos: ritual marriage with the goddess/priestess
Highly legalistic
Law Codes
Contracts
Judicial proceedings and appeals processes
Extensive trading networks
At first, the Sumerians used
stone and clay tokens to keep
track of their mercantile
dealings.
Around 3200 bce these
tokens were replaced by
markings made on clay
tablets and written language
was born.
The first cuneiform writings
consisted of pictograms,
drawings of the items
represented.
Shortly thereafter ideograms,
or abstract symbols, were
also used.
Mesopotamian
Writing
Tablet of pre-cuneiform script
South Mesopotamia
Uruk III, end of 4th millenium bce.
Clay (?sun-baked clay)
Louvre
Writing: Pictograms
Cylinder Seals
Cylinder Seal with Watergod, Birdman, and Deities
Mesopotamia, Akkadian Period, 2300 - 2200 bce.
Emory University
Cuneiform
Clay Tablet,
ca. 1900 bce
Cuneiform recorded
all important
activities, from the
sale of land to
marriage and
adoption contracts.
By the middle of the
third millennium
bce, the Sumerian
written language was
developed enough to
record oral epic
poetry, such as The
Epic of Gilgamesh
Writing: Cuneiform
Cuneiform Cylinder of Nabopolassar Recording Repair of the City Wall of
Babylon, Mesopotamia, Babylon
Neo-Babylonian Period, Reign of Nabopolassar, 625 - 605 bce
Emory University
Deciphering Cuneiform
1835: Henry Rawlinson, an English army officer, found some inscriptions on a cliff at
Behistun in Persia. Carved in the reign of King Darius of Persia (522-486 bce), they
consisted of identical texts in three languages: Old Persian, Babylonian and Elamite.
Student Practice Tablet
Literacy was a highly valued
skill
Sumerians set up first
institutions of formal
education: edubba
Education included writing
and mathematics
Tuition paid for education
Educated were privileged
elite: government officials,
scribes, etc.
LAWS: The Code of
Hammurabi, ca. 1760 bce
Shamash bestows laws upon Hammurabi
EARLIER LAW
CODES:
2350 bce law reform
by King Urukagina of
Lagash to protect
exploited citizens
21st c. bce: earliest
extant law code from
Ur-Nammu (1000 years
before the 10
Commandments
Law-Codex of Hammurabi,first half of the 18th
century BCE, Basalt, Louvre
Full Text of the Code of Hammurabi
Nippur
Flood Tablet
...a flood will sweep over the cult centers;
To destroy the seed of mankind...
Is the decision, the word of the assembly of
the gods.
By the word commanded by An and Enlil...
All the windstorms, exceedingly powerful,
attacked as one,
At the same time, the flood sweeps over the
cult centers.
The tablet can be dated by its script
to the late 17th century bce.
University of Pennsylvania
After, for seven days and seven nights,
The flood had swept over the land,
And the huge boat had been tossed about by
the windstorms on the great waters,
Utu came forth, who sheds light on heaven
and earth,
Ziusudra opened a window on the huge boat,
The hero Utu brought his rays into the giant
boat.
Enheduanna,
Priestess and Poet
the world’s first known writer
Original tablet
Reconstuction of alabaster disk,Philadephia
Enheduanna’s Inscription
Here are the first 4 lines of cuneiform:
1) en-he-du-an-na.....................En-he-du-ana,
2) MUNUS.NUNUZ.ZI.............zirru priestess
3) dam-nanna........................... wife of the god Nanna,
4) dumu-...................................daughter
The inscription continues:
5) sarru-GI............................ of Sargon,
6) [ lugal]............................... [king] of
7) KIS................................... the world (Kish),
8) e-INANNA.ZA.ZA............. in the temple of the
goddess
9) uri.KI-ma-ka...................... Inanna- ZA.ZA in Ur,
10) bara-si-ga........................ made a socle and
11) bi-e-du
12) bara bansur-an-na...........named it: 'dais, table of
13) mu-se bi-sa......................the god An'.
Were Egyptians the first
scribes?
The earliest writing ever
seen may have been
discovered in southern
Egypt. The hieroglyphics
record linen and oil
deliveries made over 5,000
years ago.
The exact date of Sumerian
writing remains in doubt
but the new Egyptian
discoveries have been
confidently dated to
between 3300 bce and
3200 bce using carbon
isotopes
On the left, the lightning bolt spells "grh", or darkness.
On the right, the snake is "dj", which with the mountain sign writes
"djw", for mountain
EARLY DYNASTIC PERIOD
Dynasties 1 & 2: ca. 3100-2700 bce
Establishment of divine
kingship as Egypt's form
of government
Goal to gain stable,
superior status in MidEast
Writing evolved from a
few simple signs to a
complex system of
several hundreds of signs
with both phonetic and
ideographic values.
Den the 4th King of the 1st Dynasty
Palermo Stone
A dark stone containing
information from the
early dynasties.
It is inscribed on both
sides with a list of kings
from Pre-Dynastic Egypt
to the middle of the 5th
Dynasty.
The exact creation date is
not known, the earliest
possible date being the
middle of the 5th Dynasty.
Egyptian Hieroglyphs
Hieroglyphs were called by the Egyptians "the words of God"
and were used mainly by the priests.
The painstakingly drawn symbols decorated the walls of temples
Hieratic script was used for conducting day to day business
Hieroglyphs are written in rows or columns and can be read from
left to right or from right to left. The direction in which the text is
to be read is indicated by the human or animal figures which
always face towards the beginning of the line.
The upper symbols are read before the lower.
History of
Hieroglyphs
Rosetta Stone, 196 bce
30th century BCE: The
hieroglyphic system is developed.
500 BCE: A slow revolution of
hieroglyphic writing starts, as new
signs are introduced.
394 CE: The date of the last case of
hieroglyphic writing.
1799: The Rosetta Stone is
discovered, which contained the
same text in two languages (Egyptian
and Greek), and in three writing
system (hieroglyphic, demotic and
Greek).
1822: The French scientist JeanFrancoise Champollion completed
the decipherment of the hieroglyphs.
Hieroglyphs from the Valley of the Kings
History of Hieratic Script
Around 2750 BCE: First examples of hieratic script.
Around 2000 BCE: Writing direction changes from
vertical to horizontal read from right to left
Around 600 BCE: Demotic script replaces hieratic script
for use with secular writing. Hieratic continued to be used
for religious texts.
Around 100 CE: Last examples of hieratic script.
Hieratic
Script
Developed from the hieroglyphic
system.
Hieratic comes from Greek denoting
"priestly", since it was used only for
sacred texts in the last 1000 years of its
existence.
Hieratic script was used in carved or
painted inscriptions, normally written in
ink with a reed pen on papyrus.
Hieratic script lasted for about 3200
years, but was through the last 1000 years
challenged by demotic script.
Hieratic script was taught in school,
while hieroglyphs were only understood
by a small minority of priests.
History of Demotic Script
660 bce: First known example of demotic script.
5th century bce: Demotic script is in use all over Egypt.
Beginning 4th century ce: Demotic script is starting to be
replaced by Greek writing.
425 ce: Last known example of demotic script.
Demotic script lasted for about
1000 years, during the last period
of ancient Egyptian history.
The term "demotic" comes from
the Greek word for people, or
popular.
Demotic script was used for
business and literary purposes,
while hieratic was used for
religious texts.
Demotic was the most
abbreviated and cursive script
developed by the ancient
Egyptians
Most demotic texts were written
in ink on papyrus. It was also
written on wood or linen or
carved in stone or metal.
Demotic Script
The Scribe Heti
Who were
the
Phoenicians?
Phoenicians, Canaanites & Punic/
Carthaginians are the same people:
Eastern Canaanites were called
Phoenicians by the Greeks & Western
Canaanites were called Punic by the
Romans.
The Phoenicians called themselves
Canaanites, and they were the
descendants of two groups, the early
Canaanites who inhabited the coast of
Lebanon, and the Sea People who
invaded Lebanon about l200 bce.
Economic opportunity and population
pressures led them into the
Mediterranean Sea where they became
great traders and colonizers
The Phoenician alphabetic script of 22
letters was used at Byblos as early as the
15th century bce
Phoenicia
Phoenicia is a term which was
applied by classical authors to the
city-states northern Lebanon from
1200 bce onwards.
Their main cities were Tyre, Sidon
and Byblos on the coast of Lebanon
The Greek word from which
'Phoenicia' derived meant 'purple',
and was a translation of the name
'Canaan'
Canaan which may have had some
. linguistic connection with the purple
dye produced from local murex
shellfish for which the region was
famous
http://phoenicia.org/
http://www.cedarland.org/phoenicia.html
http://www.lebanon2000.com/ph.htm
The Sea
Peoples
• The Phoenicians were the best seafarers and ship builders of
the ancient world.
• The famous Lebanese cedar trees covering the slopes of
mountains of their native land was a perfect material for
construction of strong seaworthy ships.
• The Phoenicians are credited with the division of a circle into
360 degrees and having reliable celestial reference points.
• The earliest evidence for Phoenician ships comes from an
Egyptian tomb relief of around 1400 bce at Thebes which
shows Phoenician ships unloading in an Egyptian port.
Phoenician
Writing
The 1st inscription reads:
"Wall built by Abibaal, king of
Byblos, for Baalat-Gebel, his
lady. May Baalat-Gebel prolong
the days of Abibaal and his
years over Byblos."
The 3rd inscription reads:
"Wall built by Shipitbaal, king
of Byblos, son of Elibaal, king
of Byblos, for Baalat-Gebel, his
lady. [May] Baalat-Gebel
prolong the days of Shipitbaal
and his years over Byblos."
[The red line indicates the
presumed location for
`Shipitbaal'.]
Phoenician alphabet
The Phoenician alphabet consisted of twenty-two symbols, all
consonants. Each one represented its own sound.
The Egyptian symbol for the ox head was given the
Semitic name aleph and was sounded as "a."
The Phoenician alphabet was used to form the other alphabets
which followed it. Aleph became the Greek
alpha, Beth became beta. In time, these letters became the Latin
letters A and B, etc.
The written language was inscribed on papyrus, a type
of paper made of reeds.
Papyrus was so associated with the city of Byblos
(which traded cedar for the paper) that when the writing of the
Hebrew prophets were translated into Greek the city's name was
given to the great book- Biblia: the Bible.
Phoenician alphabet
Cadmus’s gift
to the Greeks
“The Phoenicians who came with Cadmus … introduced into
Greece, after their settlement in the country, a number of
accomplishments, of which the most important was writing, an art
till then, I think, unknown to the Greeks. At first they used the
same characters as all the other Phoenicians, but as time went on,
and they changed their language, they also changed the shape of
their letters. At that period most of the Greeks in the neighborhood
were Ionians; they were taught these letters by the Phoenicians and
adopted them, with a few alterations, for their own use, continuing
to refer to them as the Phoenician characters - as was only right, as
the Phoenicians had introduced them. “
Herodotus, The Histories
Writing in China
The origins of Chinese writing are obscure and debated.
Some believe that the principle was borrowed through the trade
routes from Sumeria to China--which would be an example of
stimulus diffusion.
Many believe that the ancient Chinese hit upon the writing
principle completely independently.
The earliest known form of true writing in China dates from the
Shang dynasty, 1200 bce-1045 bce, dates considerably later
than for Sumerian writing.
Pictographic signs may have been used in China long before
that.
Ancient pictograms and ideograms came to be used to denote
syllables of sound rather than to depict concepts.
Shang Dynasty
16th-11th c. bce
Oracle Bones
• Oracle bones were used for
divination.
• A question was written on the bone,
which was then fired and a T shaped
crack was produced to be
interpreted; the interpretation was
then written on the bone.
• After the predicted event occurred,
the date of the occurrence was also
written on the bone.
Astronomy and Calendar
Oracle bone with record of solar
eclipse
Ox bone inscribed with a table of
the Heavenly Stems and Earthly
Branches
Writing in the Americas
The oldest discovered examples of writing
in the Americas are a cylinder seal and
carved greenstone plaque bearing glyphs
dating to ca. 650 bce, uncovered near the
Olmec center of La Venta in Tabasco,
http://www.anthro.fsu.edu/
Mexico.
Key aspects of the Mesoamerican scripts research/meso/PohlPR.html
were present in Olmec writing:
the combination of pictographic and glyphic
elements to represent speech,
the use of the sacred 260-day calendar,
the connection between writing, the calendar,
and kingship
Writing spread from La Venta to other
parts of Mesoamerica, where the Maya
developed the Olmec prototype into the
New World's most sophisticated script
Olmec
ca. 1200-300 bce
Olmecs
Established the first major Mesoamerican civilization.
Often regarded as the Mother Culture of later Middle
American civilizations,the Olmec people called
themselves Xi
First to use stone architecturally and sculpturally
Clever mathematicians and astronomers who made
accurate calendars
Highly developed technical skills
magnetic compass
skill with iron ores
complex drainage system
First writing in North America
Olmec
Glyph
This plaque
records the
story of
creation.
It shows the
World Tree
sprouting out
of Creation
Mountain
Olmec influence on
Central-American Civilizations
Art
Religious symbolism
Hieroglyphic writing
Bar and dot numbering
system
Calendar
Bloodletting ritual
Ball game
MAYANS
Although there was never such a thing as a Maya Empire,
the diverse peoples and politico-religious formations that in
the past occupied Yucatán and modern day Belize, Chiapas,
Guatemala and Honduras, all had common cultural
characteristics:
a highly developed calendar
a rich complex writing system, and sophisticated mathematics..
Archeologists and historians recognize several periods in
the history of these cultures:
Preclassic 2000 bce-100ad
Classic 100 -900 ad
Postclassic 900 ad-1500 ad
Mayan
Hieroglyphics
The unit of the Maya writing
system is the glyphic cartouche,
which is equivalent to the words
and sentences of a modern
language.
Maya cartouches included at least
three or four glyphs and as many
as fifty.
There is no Maya alphabet.
Writing was considered to be a
sacred gift from the gods.
Knowledge of reading and writing
was jealously guarded by a small
elite class, who believed that they
alone could interact directly with
the gods
Glyphs representing, from left to right:
the sky
an ahau (king) a house
a child
the city of Palenque.
The Maya wrote using 800 individual signs or glyphs, paired in columns
that read together from left to right and top to bottom. Maya glyphs
represented words or syllables that could be combined to form any word
or concept in the Mayan language, including numbers, time periods,
royal names, titles, dynastic events, and the names of gods, scribes,
sculptors, objects, buildings, places, and food.
Maya glyphs were also
painted on codices made
of either deer hide or
bleached fig-tree paper
that was then covered
with a thin layer of plaster
and folded accordionstyle.
Codices
Codices recorded rituals,
chronologies, myths and
important events.
Most were burned by the
Spanish during the 16th c.
4 Extant Codices:
Dresden, Madrid, Paris, Grolier
Popul Vuh
Book of Council
Sacred book of Quiche Maya
Lords of the great kingdom of Quiche
had a way of seeing what could not be
seen with the physical eye.
Their guide was Popul Vuh, a book that
could allow the lords to know past and
future events.
The book speaks of occurrences before
the first sunrise.
Ancient Writing