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A history of
writing
 Who invented the first systems

of writing?

 What did they look like?
 How have they changed over

time?
What came first?
Long, long before writing, humans were talking to
each other and for thousands of years, ideas and
information were passed down through the spoken
word and story-telling.
Simple drawings of animals have been found
carved or painted onto cave walls that are over
30,000 years old! But the real purpose of these
drawings simply isn’t known.
It was much later that real systems of writing were
created. Writing seems to have been invented in
different parts of the world at more or less the same
time.
Some early cave art
LEFT: A cave
engraving of an
antelope from
Algeria.

RIGHT: Cave painting from
France, possibly as old as
40,000 years.
How many sheep..?
Writing as inventory
The earliest writing seems to have been to keep a
record of property - how many animals you had,
how much land or how many measures of grain your
neighbours owed you.
‘Counting tokens’ made of clay were used for this
purpose to trade around 6,000 years ago.
For example, a token with a shape of a coin and with
a cross carved on it indicated a sheep; a coneshaped token meant a measure of corn, an eggshaped indicated a flask of oil, etc. For 20 sheep,
people needed to use 20 sheep tokens.
Clay trading tokens

Later, these tokens became smaller, more like
today’s coins, and the had a symbol on them to
show which animal or item they represented.
Number systems developed so that a single coin
could represent 10 or 20 of that object.
1. Earliest writing – In
Sumer
Historians agree that one
of the first groups of
people to start real writing
– and not simply cave
pictures – were the
Sumerians.

Sumer was an ancient
civilization based in
modern-day Iraq and part
of the area once known as
Mesopotamia.
Mesopotamia means
‘between rivers’. Can you
see the two rivers on the
The Sumerians & Writing
The Sumerians were the first people to
inhabit the area of Iraq, over 6,000
years ago.
They made great progress with writing:
 They kept records of taxes
 They wrote down laws
 They also worked out a calendar.
They divided the day into 24 hours
and an hour into 60 minutes.
Sumerian writing Pictographic
Sumerian
writing began
about 5000
years ago as
pictures –
pictographs –
that
represented
what they were.
The pictures
were carved
into clay tablets
then baked in
an oven.
What do you
Cuneiform (kyu-ney-uhform)
Eventually, the pictographs were simplified as
straight lines made using a wedge-shaped stick
called a stylus. This early writing is called
Cuneiform. The word comes from the Latin word
for ‘wedge’.
Look at the tip of the stylus
Cuneiform example
What do
you think it
says?
Cuneiform writing
spread across the
ancient Middle
East. The straight
wedges were
easier to make
than curved lines.
How do you think
the circular holes
2. Earliest writing - Egypt
At around the same time as the Egyptians also
developed their own system of writing.
Hieroglyphics.
The Egyptians didn’t write on clay tablets but
used papyrus (an ancient paper made from the
papyrus grass plant).

Papyrus paper rolled into scrolls.
Hieroglyphics
Many hieroglyphics are also
pictograms, often drawn
sideways.
The word ‘hiero’ means ‘sacred’
and ‘glyph’ means ‘carved’ or
‘engraved’. For the Egyptians,
writing was something sacred and
divine.
The oldest hieroglyphics are
thought to be about 6,000 years
old.
Some hieroglyphics
represented a complete
word but many others
stood for syllables.
They had even more
symbols than the
Sumerians did, as
many as 5,000!
The Egyptians used
their hieroglyphics for
thousands of years.
Hieroglyphics
Writing was timeconsuming and, in
both Egypt and
Mesopotamia, it was
an activity reserved
for professional
people called
scribes.
They were highly
trained, important
people.
No vowels?!
According to experts, the Egyptians didn’t include
vowels when they wrote. This makes it very
difficult for us today to decipher how to
pronounce many words.
Can you imagine our writing without any vowels?

t wld b vry dffclt t rd!
Pictogram Problems
Also, what problems might you have
if your writing system was all made
from pictures?
Can you ‘draw’ every word as a
picture easily?

Which words can you think of that
might be difficult to draw as a
picture?
Rebus to the rescue!
To solve the problems of writing all words through pictures,
sometimes hieroglyphics were used to represent a sound
rather than represent the object drawn.
This is known as the rebus principle. It meant complex
words could be written using hieroglyphics.
A rebus is a message spelt out in pictures using the
pronunciation of each picture . For example, what do these
two pictures mean together?

+

=?
Did you guess it
correctly?
‘eye’ + ‘deer’ makes…. ‘idea’!
↵ Here are
some more.
Can you think
of your own?
Phoenician alphabet
• The next big change in writing came nearly two
thousand years later, around 3,000 years ago.

• At that time people called the Phoenicians
lived on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean
Sea, where Israel is today.
• The Phoenicians sailed all over the
Mediterranean buying and selling things. They
needed an easy way to keep records of what
they bought and sold so they invented their
own writing system.
Phoenician Alphabet 2
Unlike in hieroglyphics and Cuneiform, the Phoenicians
realized that there would be far, far fewer symbols in their
writing if they didn’t have a symbol for each syllable but
instead used shorter sounds.
So instead of having one symbol for "al" they one for "a" and
one for "l".

The Phoenician alphabet had just 22 letters -- even fewer
than ours.
Because the Phoenicians were such great travellers and their
alphabet was so easy to use, many other peoples learned to
use it too.
The Greeks developed their alphabet based on the
Phoenicians', and the Romans based theirs on the Greeks'.
Other ancient writing
systems
CHINA: The oldest traces of Chinese
scripts date from the Shang dynasty
(3,500 years ago). It was made of
pictograms and mainly for religious
purposes.
MEXICO: Writing appeared around 2,700
years ago. It seems that the Mayas
derived their writing from an older writing,
used by other peoples. The Maya's writing
was syllabic and was used to describe the
most important events in the most
Today.. Pictures still
important
Pictures for signs are still used to communicate
today:
Modern-day Pictograms
Writing – still developing
What are ‘emoticons’?
Why were they created?
Now your turn!
In pairs, read the text ‘A history of writing’ and see if you
can answer the following questions in your Unit
notebooks:
1. Why was writing first invented?
2a. In which two places in the world did writing systems
develop?
2b. What were these two writing systems like?
3. Who were the Phoenicians and how was their writing
system different?
4. Which two alphabets were created after the Phoenician
alphabet?

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The history of writing

  • 1. A history of writing  Who invented the first systems of writing?  What did they look like?  How have they changed over time?
  • 2. What came first? Long, long before writing, humans were talking to each other and for thousands of years, ideas and information were passed down through the spoken word and story-telling. Simple drawings of animals have been found carved or painted onto cave walls that are over 30,000 years old! But the real purpose of these drawings simply isn’t known. It was much later that real systems of writing were created. Writing seems to have been invented in different parts of the world at more or less the same time.
  • 3. Some early cave art LEFT: A cave engraving of an antelope from Algeria. RIGHT: Cave painting from France, possibly as old as 40,000 years.
  • 4. How many sheep..? Writing as inventory The earliest writing seems to have been to keep a record of property - how many animals you had, how much land or how many measures of grain your neighbours owed you. ‘Counting tokens’ made of clay were used for this purpose to trade around 6,000 years ago. For example, a token with a shape of a coin and with a cross carved on it indicated a sheep; a coneshaped token meant a measure of corn, an eggshaped indicated a flask of oil, etc. For 20 sheep, people needed to use 20 sheep tokens.
  • 5. Clay trading tokens Later, these tokens became smaller, more like today’s coins, and the had a symbol on them to show which animal or item they represented. Number systems developed so that a single coin could represent 10 or 20 of that object.
  • 6. 1. Earliest writing – In Sumer Historians agree that one of the first groups of people to start real writing – and not simply cave pictures – were the Sumerians. Sumer was an ancient civilization based in modern-day Iraq and part of the area once known as Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia means ‘between rivers’. Can you see the two rivers on the
  • 7. The Sumerians & Writing The Sumerians were the first people to inhabit the area of Iraq, over 6,000 years ago. They made great progress with writing:  They kept records of taxes  They wrote down laws  They also worked out a calendar. They divided the day into 24 hours and an hour into 60 minutes.
  • 8. Sumerian writing Pictographic Sumerian writing began about 5000 years ago as pictures – pictographs – that represented what they were. The pictures were carved into clay tablets then baked in an oven. What do you
  • 9. Cuneiform (kyu-ney-uhform) Eventually, the pictographs were simplified as straight lines made using a wedge-shaped stick called a stylus. This early writing is called Cuneiform. The word comes from the Latin word for ‘wedge’.
  • 10. Look at the tip of the stylus
  • 11. Cuneiform example What do you think it says? Cuneiform writing spread across the ancient Middle East. The straight wedges were easier to make than curved lines. How do you think the circular holes
  • 12. 2. Earliest writing - Egypt At around the same time as the Egyptians also developed their own system of writing. Hieroglyphics. The Egyptians didn’t write on clay tablets but used papyrus (an ancient paper made from the papyrus grass plant). Papyrus paper rolled into scrolls.
  • 13. Hieroglyphics Many hieroglyphics are also pictograms, often drawn sideways. The word ‘hiero’ means ‘sacred’ and ‘glyph’ means ‘carved’ or ‘engraved’. For the Egyptians, writing was something sacred and divine. The oldest hieroglyphics are thought to be about 6,000 years old.
  • 14. Some hieroglyphics represented a complete word but many others stood for syllables. They had even more symbols than the Sumerians did, as many as 5,000! The Egyptians used their hieroglyphics for thousands of years.
  • 15. Hieroglyphics Writing was timeconsuming and, in both Egypt and Mesopotamia, it was an activity reserved for professional people called scribes. They were highly trained, important people.
  • 16. No vowels?! According to experts, the Egyptians didn’t include vowels when they wrote. This makes it very difficult for us today to decipher how to pronounce many words. Can you imagine our writing without any vowels? t wld b vry dffclt t rd!
  • 17. Pictogram Problems Also, what problems might you have if your writing system was all made from pictures? Can you ‘draw’ every word as a picture easily? Which words can you think of that might be difficult to draw as a picture?
  • 18. Rebus to the rescue! To solve the problems of writing all words through pictures, sometimes hieroglyphics were used to represent a sound rather than represent the object drawn. This is known as the rebus principle. It meant complex words could be written using hieroglyphics. A rebus is a message spelt out in pictures using the pronunciation of each picture . For example, what do these two pictures mean together? + =?
  • 19. Did you guess it correctly? ‘eye’ + ‘deer’ makes…. ‘idea’! ↵ Here are some more. Can you think of your own?
  • 20. Phoenician alphabet • The next big change in writing came nearly two thousand years later, around 3,000 years ago. • At that time people called the Phoenicians lived on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, where Israel is today. • The Phoenicians sailed all over the Mediterranean buying and selling things. They needed an easy way to keep records of what they bought and sold so they invented their own writing system.
  • 21. Phoenician Alphabet 2 Unlike in hieroglyphics and Cuneiform, the Phoenicians realized that there would be far, far fewer symbols in their writing if they didn’t have a symbol for each syllable but instead used shorter sounds. So instead of having one symbol for "al" they one for "a" and one for "l". The Phoenician alphabet had just 22 letters -- even fewer than ours. Because the Phoenicians were such great travellers and their alphabet was so easy to use, many other peoples learned to use it too. The Greeks developed their alphabet based on the Phoenicians', and the Romans based theirs on the Greeks'.
  • 22.
  • 23. Other ancient writing systems CHINA: The oldest traces of Chinese scripts date from the Shang dynasty (3,500 years ago). It was made of pictograms and mainly for religious purposes. MEXICO: Writing appeared around 2,700 years ago. It seems that the Mayas derived their writing from an older writing, used by other peoples. The Maya's writing was syllabic and was used to describe the most important events in the most
  • 24. Today.. Pictures still important Pictures for signs are still used to communicate today:
  • 26. Writing – still developing
  • 27. What are ‘emoticons’? Why were they created?
  • 28. Now your turn! In pairs, read the text ‘A history of writing’ and see if you can answer the following questions in your Unit notebooks: 1. Why was writing first invented? 2a. In which two places in the world did writing systems develop? 2b. What were these two writing systems like? 3. Who were the Phoenicians and how was their writing system different? 4. Which two alphabets were created after the Phoenician alphabet?