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cuneiform writing

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cuneiform writing

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Examples illustrating the evolution of cuneiform writing.
(credit: © Merriam-Webster Inc.)
System of writing employed in ancient times to write a number of languages of the Middle East. The original and primary writing material for cuneiform texts was a damp clay tablet, into which the scribe would press a wedge-shaped stroke with a reed stylus. A configuration of such impressions constituted a character, or sign. Proto-cuneiform signs dating from c. 3200–3000 BC were drawn rather than impressed and were largely pictographic (see pictography), though these features were lost as the script evolved. A single cuneiform sign could be a logogram (an arbitrary representation of a word) or a syllabogram (a representation of the sound of a syllable). The first language to be written in cuneiform was Sumerian (see Sumer). Akkadian began to be written in cuneiform c. 2350 BC. Later the script was adapted to other South Asian languages. Cuneiform was slowly displaced in the first millennium BC by the rise of Aramaic, written in an alphabet script of Phoenician origin. Knowledge of the value of cuneiform signs was lost until the mid-19th century, when European scholars deciphered the script.



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Among the topics are the obsolescence and demise of cuneiform writing in Elam, script obsolescence in ancient Italy from pre-Roman to Roman, alphabetic reincarnation in Arabia, the Manchu case, and the death of Mexican pictography.
Those waters supported the birth and development of Mesopotamia and the cultures of Assyria, Babylon and Sumer, that last of which was the first-ever civilization in all of world history and gave us the discovery of bronze, a viable calendar, cuneiform writing (precursor to our own alphabet), mathematics and astronomy.
Samples were discovered in the grave of Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, dating back go the mid 1300's BC, and reference is made to liquorice in Babylonian-Assyrian cuneiform writings from 650 BC.
 
 
 
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