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History of Technology 6: Proto-Writing Systems 55 Views
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Description:
Proto-writing systems were great, but we're pretty sure your teacher isn't going to accept an essay in Cuneiform. Just a wild guess.
Transcript
- 00:02
Humanity’s first baby steps into the writing process are collectively called "proto-writing" [Evolution picture with the most modern man turning round and saying "stop following me"]
- 00:08
systems, which developed in the Neolithic age. [Examples of Neolithic writing]
- 00:12
The line between proto-writing and today’s writing is a squiggly, strange one that anthropologists [The Neolithic alphabet]
- 00:19
and archaeologists have drawn…
- 00:21
…Guess they didn't have a ruler handy… [Archaeologist and anthropologist playing naughts and crosses]
Full Transcript
- 00:24
Here are the two main differences…
- 00:26
For one thing, a fully developed writing system has to have a symbol for every sound in a [Drawing of man chucking a spear at an animal]
- 00:32
language.
- 00:33
That means that everything we say out loud can be transcribed into a written form. [Man talking as woman transcribes onto paper]
- 00:39
Proto-writing systems only have some of the sounds represented.
- 00:43
Proto-writing systems are also typically pictorial, which means that they rely on little drawings.
- 00:49
Most of those drawings directly represent their meanings, rather than representing them [Examples of drawings]
- 00:53
symbolically...
- 00:54
Like…they might have a symbol that represents porcupines, but not letters that represent [Man painting a portrait of a porcupine]
- 00:59
the sounds we make when we say that word.
- 01:03
Proto-writing may sound primitive to some, but we still use some forms of it today. [Examples of modern signage]
- 01:08
Like how about those little round headed people on bathroom doors?
- 01:11
We know which one is which because when they were made, way back when, girls equaled skirts, [Toilet doors with male and female signs on]
- 01:18
and boys equaled pants.
- 01:20
Guess the people who made those forgot about the Scots. [Man in a kilt walks into the wrong bathroom]
- 01:22
The other potential ancestors of modern writing were ancient number systems.
- 01:27
Counting probably started with cave folks counting on their fingers. [Man pointing to his fingers]
- 01:31
It’s useful to keep track of just how many saber-tooth tigers are prowling outside the
- 01:36
cave.
- 01:37
But eventually people moved on from fingers and toes and started making marks on stones or in clay
- 01:43
that represented numbers.
- 01:45
That same kind of symbolic thinking was useful in the development of symbols that represented [Man etching into a rock]
- 01:50
sounds.
- 01:51
So, eventually, these systems stewed together in the cauldron of human history and turned [Cauldron bubbling]
- 01:55
into a lovely soup of writing.
- 01:58
An…alphabet soup, perhaps…?
- 02:00
Anyway, this magical process happened in three different places around the world. [The Earth spinning]
- 02:04
To be fair, there's still some debate about the precise whens and wheres of the writing, but
- 02:08
what follows is a pretty good guess…
- 02:10
The earliest formal writing system was Sumerian cuneiform, which developed [Iraq is highlighted on a globe]
- 02:16
in modern day Iraq.
- 02:18
The Sumerians created a system of glyphs that directly represented things. [Pictures of glyphs]
- 02:24
They pressed these glyphs into clay tablets with reed styluses.
- 02:27
Later, the Sumerian written language got fancier, with glyphs being used to represent sounds. [Man drawing on a clay tablet]
- 02:34
One of the other really old writing systems began in China. [China highlighted on a globe]
- 02:38
Some people think they got the idea from the Mesopotamians…
- 02:41
But the Chinese probably mostly thought of it all on their lonesome. [Chinese man kicks Mesopotamian away]
- 02:46
The oldest examples of Chinese writing were found on these things called oracle bones. [Picture of an oracle bone]
- 02:51
The ancient Chinese would carve letters into ox bones with a bronze pin and then throw [Man carving into a bone]
- 02:56
the bones into a fire.
- 02:58
Afterwards, they would examine the cracks made in the bones to try and divine the future. [Man picks the bone out of a fire]
- 03:03
Sounds a lot cooler than the Magic Eight Ball.
- 03:06
And last but not least, writing was developed independently in Mesoamerica, which is modern [Mexico highlighted on a globe]
- 03:12
day Mexico and Central America.
- 03:14
This area was home to lots of advanced ancient civilizations like the Olmec, Maya, Aztec,
- 03:20
and more.
- 03:22
Many of these civilizations developed written languages that represented whole concepts, [Ancient kid drawing on a wall]
- 03:27
or even syllables of sound. [The kids mum hits him on the head for drawing on the wall]
- 03:29
And perhaps most importantly, these systems may have allowed people to spell their names
- 03:33
with a picture of a jaguar head.
- 03:35
Not gonna lie… we're kind of jealous… [Man signs a reciept with a jaguar head]
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