Search This Blog

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Dawn of Egyptian Writing - Archaeology Magazine


https://www.archaeology.org/issues/281-1801/features/6172-egypt-elkab-early-hieroglyphs

Dawn of Egyptian Writing

El-Khawy, Egypt

Monday, December 11, 2017

Top Ten Egypt Early Hieroglyphics
(Alberto Urcia, Elkab Desert Survey Project)

Newly discovered, the earliest known public Egyptian hieroglyphic inscription contains four symbols (right to left): a bull's head mounted on a pole, followed by two storks flanking an ibis. It is believed to be royal messaging.

 

Archaeologists have discovered an oversized inscription that offers a new glimpse into the early development of the Egyptian writing system. A team led by Yale University Egyptologist John Darnell found the hieroglyphs on a cliff face within view of a desert road north of the ancient city of Elkab. Dating to around 3250 B.C., they were carved during Dynasty 0, a period when the Nile Valley was divided into competing kingdoms and scribes were just beginning to master writing. Previously discovered Dynasty 0 inscriptions are less than an inch in height and are largely confined to arcane administrative matters, but the newly discovered inscription is 27 inches tall, and is the earliest known set of large-scale, highly visible hieroglyphs by some 300 years.

 

The inscription's symbols—a bull's head on a pole, followed by two storks and an ibis—are similar to those used in later Egyptian writing to equate a pharaoh's authority with control over the cosmos. That led Darnell to conclude that the inscription was a royal boundary marker that asserted a king's dominion over the area. "It was like a signpost," says Darnell. "Travelers along that road would have known they were entering an area under official authority." In addition, he believes the discovery suggests that Egyptian writing developed at a quicker pace than previously thought, and was being used to publicly project royal power at a very early date.

--   Sent from my Linux system.

No comments:

Post a Comment