1.8 KiB
1.8 KiB
Cuneiform
Overview
Cuneiform is the earliest known writing system, developed in Sumer ~3400 BCE. Written by pressing a reed stylus into wet clay tablets, it was used for over 3,000 years across multiple languages and civilizations. @t[~3400 BCE..=75 CE]
Key Facts
- Origin: Sumer, southern Mesopotamia, ~3400 BCE @t[~3400 BCE]
- Medium: Clay tablets impressed with a wedge-shaped reed stylus
- Name: From Latin cuneus ("wedge")
- Languages written: Sumerian, Akkadian, Eblaite, Elamite, Hittite, Hurrian, Luwian, Urartian, Old Persian 1 2
- Influenced: Ugaritic and Old Persian alphabets derived from the cuneiform tradition 2
- Deciphered by: Georg Friedrich Grotefend (1802), Henry Rawlinson, Edward Hincks, and others (~1835–1857) via the Behistun Inscription @t[~1802 CE..~1857 CE] 1
Development
- Proto-cuneiform: pictographic/logographic system for accounting (~3400–3000 BCE), attested by ~5,000 tablets from Uruk @t[~3400 BCE..~3000 BCE] 2
- Evolved into syllabic writing by ~2600 BCE @t[~2600 BCE]
- Akkadian texts attested from the 24th century BCE onward; Akkadian became the dominant cuneiform language @t[~2400 BCE..] 2
- ~600–1,000 signs in use at various periods
- Last known cuneiform tablet: 75 CE (astronomical text from Babylon) @t[=75 CE] 3
Significance
- Enabled record-keeping, literature, law, science, and diplomacy @t[~3400 BCE..=75 CE]
- Preserved the Epic of Gilgamesh, Code of Hammurabi, and thousands of administrative records
- ~500,000 cuneiform tablets have been excavated; many remain untranslated 2
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Walker, C.B.F. Cuneiform (British Museum, 1987) ↩︎
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Mark, J.J. "Cuneiform." World History Encyclopedia, 2011. https://www.worldhistory.org/cuneiform/ ↩︎
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Robson, E. Mathematics in Ancient Iraq (Princeton, 2008) ↩︎