Ancient egyptian scripts (1)

1,995 views 6 slides May 10, 2015
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About This Presentation

history of arts


Slide Content

Ancient Egyptian scripts:
 Hieroglyphs
 Hieratic
 Demotic

Origins of Egyptian Hieroglyphs
The ancient Egyptians believed that writing was invented by the god Thoth and
called their hieroglyphic script "mdju netjer" ("words of the gods").
The hieroglyphic script was used mainly for formal inscriptions on the walls of
temples and tombs. In some inscriptions the glyphs are very detailed and in full
colour, in others they are simple outlines. For everyday writing the hieratic script
was used.

The direction of writing in the hieroglyphic script varied - it could be written in
horizontal lines running either from left to right or from right to left, or in vertical
columns running from top to bottom. You can tell the direction of any piece of
writing by looking at the way the animals and people are facing - they look
towards the beginning of the line. The arrangement of glyphs was based partly on
artistic considerations.







Thoth Egyptian God of Writing and Wisdom



The Ancient Egyptian scribe, or sesh, was a person educated in the arts of writing
(using both hieroglyphics and hieratic scripts, and from the second half of the first
millennium BCE the demotic script, used as shorthand and for commerce) and
dena (arithmetics). Sons of scribes were brought up in the same scribal tradition,
sent to school and, upon entering the civil service, inherited their fathers' positions.
Much of what is known about ancient Egypt is due to the activities of its scribes.
Monumental buildings were erected under their supervision, administrative and
economic activities were documented by them, and tales from the mouths of
Egypt's lower classes or from foreign lands survive thanks to scribes putting them
in writing.
Scribes were also considered part of the royal court and did not have to pay tax or
join the military. The scribal profession had companion professions, the painters

and artisans who decorated reliefs and other relics with scenes, personages, or
hieroglyphic text. A scribe was exempt from the heavy manual labor required of
the lower classes, or corvee labor.
A scribe's duties ranged from writing letters for townspeople, to recording harvests,
to keeping accounts for the Egyptian army. Above these scribes were more
scholarly scribes, who had advanced to higher positions such as priests, doctors,
and engineers. Priests were devoted to their religious duties in the temples at least
three months out of every year, during which time they never left the temple. At
other times the worked as judges and teachers.






Hieratic script
The Hieratic script was invented and developed more or less at the same time as
the hieroglyphic script and was used in parallel with it for everyday purposes such
as keeping records and accounts and writing letters. It was used until the 26th
Dynasty, though by that time, it was only used for religious texts, while the
Demotic script was used for most other purposes.
Notable features
 A simplified and abbreviated form of the hieroglyphic script in which the
people, animals and object depicted are no longer easily recognisable
 Structurally the same as the hieroglyphic script
 Written almost exclusively from right to left in horizontal lines and mainly
in ink on papyrus
 Written in a number of different styles such as "business hand" and the
more elaborate "book hand"

 There were a number of regional variations, one of which, a northern
version, developed into the Demotic script by the 25th Dynasty
Hieratic glyphs and the hieroglyphs they evolved from

Hieratic determinatives and the hieroglyphs they evolved from

Sample of Egyptian written in the Hieratic script

PAPYRUS:
When the Egyptians began to write, about 3000 BC, they wrote from the beginning in ink, on
papyrus (pah-PIE-russ). Papyrus is a plant that grows wild all over the Nile river valley, which is
to say it is very common in Egypt. You can cut the long stalks and soak them in water until they
rot a little, and then you lay a lot of these stalks next to each other, and a lot of other stalks on
top, crossways to the first ones, and then you pound them flat, until all the stalks get mashed into
all the other ones, and you have something a lot like paper.
At first papyrus was only used in Egypt, but by about 1000 BC people all over West Asia began
buying papyrus from Egypt and using it, since it was much more convenient than clay tablets
(less breakable, and not as heavy!). People made it in small sheets and then glued the sheets
together to make big pieces. (a craft project?)

The Book of the Dead (Louvre)
The Greeks and the Romans also used a lot of papyrus, all bought in Egypt because that is where
papyrus grows. But it wasn't cheap! One sheet probably cost about what $20 is worth today. So
when the Islamic empire learned how to make paper from rags from the Chinese about 700 AD,
people quickly stopped using papyrus, even in Egypt.
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