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Comparative Cultures

Comparative Cultures. Mass Cultural Council Creative Schools Professional Development Grant Year 2. Where are you in Social Studies ?. Review of Tech Assets. WGBH All Powerpoint lessons available on Kimberley's Website Linked Portaportal. Out of the Euphrates: Origins of Writing.

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Comparative Cultures

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  1. Comparative Cultures Mass Cultural Council Creative Schools Professional Development Grant Year 2

  2. Where are you in Social Studies ?

  3. Review of Tech Assets • WGBH • All Powerpoint lessons available on Kimberley's Website • Linked Portaportal

  4. Out of the Euphrates: Origins of Writing Mass Cultural Council Creative Schools Professional Development Grant Year 2

  5. Petrographs to Pictographs • Most languages were never written down • Spoken language predates written language • The earliest 'writing' • pictographic symbols • Pictographs date to at least 5000 BCE

  6. Ideographic / logographic • First true writing system date • 3500 BC • they consist of logographic or logophonetic symbols etched on clay tablets • abstract form of writing • represent ideas and abstract objects • The best way to think of an ideographic system is that each symbol represents a word • Egyptian is both logographic and logophonetic

  7. syllabic system • Syllabary • each symbol represents a syllable • Less symbols required to write the language • Japanese (the Katakana Syllabary) has seventy-five basic symbols, three of which combine to form an additional thirty-six symbols.

  8. alphabetic • Last writing system developed • Each symbol represents a sound • Roman Alphabet • English, Spanish, French, German, • Cyrillic Alphabet • Greek, Russian and many languages of Eastern Europe • Arabic and Hebrew are also alphabetic • the earliest alphabetic system we know of is from modern-day Syria • North Semitic language group

  9. Theories on the advent of writing • invention for complex cultures with large populations • record keeping to correctly count agricultural products • for keeping the calendar to plant crops at the correct time • religious purpose i.e.: divination, communicating with deities • socio-political functions i.e.: reinforcing power of the ruling elite • Writing was invented independently • Mesopotamia, China, and Mesoamerica • Recent discoveries suggest that writing was invented in Egypt and Indus independently of Mesopotamia

  10. Writing, Creation and the Gods • Sumerian • god Enlil was the creator of writing • Assyrian and Babylonian • god Nabu was credited as the inventor of writing and scribe of the gods • Similar to the Egyptian god Thoth, • Mesopotamian scribal gods also exhibit the power of creation via divine speech

  11. Cuneiform denotes not one but several kinds of writing systems • Sumerian • Akkadian/Assyrian/Babylonian (Eastern Semitic) • Elamite • Eblaite • Hittite • Hurrian • Utartian • Ugaritic

  12. Bullae and Tokens • Part of a number system • Bulla find from Nuzi (Northern Iraq) • Dated to1600 B.C.E. • Contained 49 small tokens • The lengthy cuneiform inscription on the outside translates to: • 21 ewes • 6 female lambs • 8 adult rams • 4 male lambs • 6 female goats • 1 male goat • 3 female kids • The Seal of the shepherd • Cylinder Seals make a repeating pattern

  13. The Philadelphia TabletFound near Baghdad, Iraq3100-2900 BC • This tablet is one of the earliest on record • Records the transfer of 300 acres of land between two parties. • illustrates the transition from token oriented record keeping to cuneiform. • The tablet is divided into 3 columns, which are further subdivided in panels. • Solid lines mark both the columns and the panels. • Reading begins at the top left (column 1), moves down the three panels on that side. and continues around the bottom edge and on to the reverse side. • The text picks up again on the front at the top of column 2, which continues down and around to the back. Column 3 does the same. • Column 1 describes the acquisition of 180 iku (63.5 hectares) of land by a person or temple household of a deity. • Columns 2 and 3 describe how the 180 iku is divided into 4 fields. • The round holes in the tablet count the bur (or field size).

  14. The Round School Tablet • Babylonian city of Nippur • Hammurabi Dynasty • "lentil" or "bun" shape • 4 rows of signs on the front of the tablet. • The teacher inscribed the signs in rows 1 and 2. • The student then copied the text into rows 3 and 4. • Sumerian signs were already 1000 years old • The signs in row 1 were pronounced gi-gur • "reed basket." • Row 2 reads gi-gur-da • large reed basket. • This lesson was both for handwriting and vocabulary.

  15. The Key to Deciphering Cuneiform: inscriptions on a cliff

  16. Cylinder Seals • Developed as part of Ancient Near Eastern numerological system • tokens and bulla: perhaps representing barley and wheat • later these were flattened out and became pillow tablets • Amulet-like cylinders worn on cords • Depictions of mythological events and mighty deities bring the wearer under the protection of personal deity • Personal identity • many temples had seals • Priests or administrators had seals for their positions • each individual clan or tribe had their own seal • individual family member seals • The impressions are the important research aid • depictions are regionally specific • inscriptions and pictures showing dress styles, mythology and kings.

  17. Archaeological Record • Cylinder Seals were made of wood, bone, stone, faience, and ivory • Which do you think survived? • Found buried with owners • Millions of sealings • Less Cylinder Seals

  18. Earliest Cylinder Seals

  19. Sumerian Period Early Sumerian steatite seal showing a god in a boat with a river scene of reeds and plants, birds or chevrons, star of divinity, three dots and an early inscription in a panel that is turned 90 degrees. The script is nearly pictographic, and the short, wide seal form is more characteristic of Jemdat Nasr than the Dynastic period. The engraving style is also in a Jemdat Nasr wheel-cut style.

  20. Uruk Period

  21. Neo-Assyrian Period Banquet scene. Serpentine cylinder seal and impression

  22. Akkadian Period

  23. Property and Personal Identity • Cylinder seals occupy a 3000 year time frame • closely linked to the use of cuneiform. • Some examples carved to look like the distal end of a bone • The stones are rounded to allow a repeating pattern over a large or small area • Seals can be made of any stone • Uruk period they were of softer stones such gypsum, later they were made of harder stones. • Lapis attests to trade between the Afghanistan area and Mesopotamia • They are carved in the reverse of cameo called intaglio. • Seals are considered rare and a fine art form

  24. Personal Identity • First time individuals can be identified • Owner wore on bracelet or necklace • Seals can tell a story • I am Anu, son of Enki, servant of Uttu • Ianna, intercedes on my behalf • Some known identities: Scribe, Female Scribe, Weaver, Stone Cutter, Accountant, Metalworker • “Nintur, Shepherd”

  25. Clay tablets & envelopes Doors Storage jars Bales of commodities Cloth Worn as amulets Signed legal contracts What did they Seal?

  26. How did they do it? • Carved in reverse, so it will read correctly when rolled out • Carved into the cylinder – intaglio • A pattern repeats when rolled on wet clay

  27. Modern Cylinder Seals Iranian artist Ahmad Nadalian

  28. Tools for making your seal • Air-dry clay • Plastic knife • Tooth pick • Plastic straw • Wooden skewer • Scissors • 12-18 inch length of cord

  29. Design Time • You have five minutes to lay-out a design for your seal on the worksheet • Remember that the carvings are reversed • Think about your identity and what you want the seal to say about you • You can use letters, pictures, numbers, designs or any combination

  30. Method for making seals • Roll out clay to make it smooth give shape • Punch into clay • Crave out clay • Incise clay • Press into clay • They are carved into the stone called intaglio.

  31. Make your Cylinder Seal Cut piece of clay Roll clay into shape and form small cylinder Decorate cylinder - letters are formed in reverse, scenes, motifs Pierce clay with wooden skewer Let dry overnight Thread cord through straw Remove stray leaving the cord in place Roll out your seal in paint on paper.

  32. Looting in modern Iraq • Larsa • Sumerian capital

  33. Phoenician

  34. Ugaritic • Written in a alphabetic cuneiform • Clay tablets written in Ugaritic provided the first evidence of the "modern" ordering of letters • This writing system was employed in the city of Ugarit, located in western Syria from around 1300 BCE

  35. Epigraphy • Punic • Neo-Punic • Phoenician proper • Late Phoenician cursive • Phoenician papyrus • Siloam Hebrew • Hebrew seals • Ammonite • Moabite • Proto-Canaanite

  36. Phoenician alphabet • developed from North Semitic prototype • was in use until about the 1st century BCE • trade spreads alphabet • All corners of the Mediterranean • ancestor of the Greek alphabet • of all Western alphabets. • Phoenician colonial scripts • Cypro-Phoenician (10th-2nd century BCE) • Sardinian (c. 9th century BCE) varieties • Punic and neo-Punic alphabets of Carthage, > 3rd century CE • Punic was a monumental script and neo-Punic a cursive form

  37. no vowels • 22-character alphabet • no vowels are used • early inscriptions ran on continuously with no division between the words • c. 1000 – 700 BC some words have points or vertical strokes to divide them • c. 700 BC words separated by spaces • Aramaic script replaced old Phoenician

  38. Coffin Lid of King • The earliest Phoenician inscription • Ahiram epitaph at Byblos in Phoenicia • dating from the 11th century BCE • written in North Semitic alphabet

  39. Trade Records & alphabet • efficient method of keeping records • pen, ink • papyrus, parchment and paper • wax-writing tablet was found in an ancient Uluburun shipwreck (Canaanite Phoenician)

  40. Uluburun shipwreck diptych http://sara.theellisschool.org/~shipwreck/artifactgallery/ekw737.html 737 Found K15 on map http://sara.theellisschool.org/~shipwreck/ulusplash.html

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