A concise and accessible introduction to the topic, this book traces the history of cuneiform from its beginnings in the fourth millennium BC to its eventual demise in the face of the ever expanding use of alphabetic Aramaic in the first millennium BC. The authors explain how this pre-alphabetic system worked and how it was possible to use it to record so many different languages. Drawing on examples from the British Museum, which has the largest and most venerable cuneiform collection in the world, this lively volume includes elementary school exercises, revealing private letters, and beautiful calligraphic literature for royal libraries.
Jonathan Taylor is Curator in the Department of the Middle East at the British Museum; trained as a philologist and responsible for part of the cuneiform collections.
We are the 'greatest literary show on Earth'.
British philologist & author of ‘The First Ghosts: Most Ancient of Legacies’, Irving Finkel is a world-renowned authority on cuneiform. https://t.co/8qkyUAmiYS
PhD candidate in #Assyriology @Yale, here to share #Mesopotamian #history. Sometimes writer, photographer, cook, tennis player. Always cat carer.
Timely piece by @ShGordin and @BeletRomach on current AI projects in #Assyriology. Excellent summary of benefits (and challenges) of automated #cuneiform translation. https://t.co/HULgaC1GBY
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Cuneiform was typically inscribed on cheap, readily available and durable material “It’s fortunate for us, because any tablet that was ever written survives, unless it was thrown in the river or smashed completely,” says Irving Finkel at @britishmuseum https://t.co/TKVCCVCBs8