Cuneiform
(Latin cuneus,”wedge”)
Cuneiform , term applied to a mode of writing utilizing
wedge-shaped strokes, inscribed mainly on clay but also on stone, metals,
wax, and other materials. This technique was used by the ancient people of
Western Asia. The earliest texts in cuneiform script were made in about 3000
BC, having antedated the use of alphabets by some 1500 years. The latest
cuneiform inscriptions date from the 1st century AD . Cuneiform writing,
which originated in southern Mesopotamia, was invented probably by the Sumerians,
who used it to inscribe the Sumerian language; it was subsequently adapted
for writing the Akkadian language, of which Babylonian and Assyrian are dialects.
Because Akkadian, the language of later inhabitants
of Sumer, became the language of international communication it was studied
in schools throughout the ancient Middle East, and the use of cuneiform spread
to Asia Minor, Syria, Persia, and, for diplomatic correspondence, to Egypt.
It was also adapted for the writing of local languages, such as Hurrian in
northern Mesopotamia, Syria, and Asia Minor; Eblaite in Syria; Hittite, Luwian,
Palaic, and Hattic in Asia Minor; Urartian, known also as Vannic, in Armenia;
and Elamite in Persia. New systems of writing, using the wedge as the basic
writing tool but differing from the Babylonian system in terms of the shape
and use of characters, were devised also. Such systems were developed in
Ugarit (Ra's Shamrah, Syria) to inscribe Ugaritic, a Semitic language, and
in Persia to inscribe the Old Persian language of the Persian Empire (550-331
BC)bc.
The earliest cuneiform inscriptions were composed
of pictographs. It was far easier, however, to imprint straight lines in
the soft clay with a special instrument than to draw in the irregular lines
of the pictographs. Consequently a stylus, suited to making tapered impressions,
was invented, and the outlines of the pictographs were gradually altered
into patterns composed of wedge-shaped lines, which became so stylized that
they bore little resemblance to the original pictograph characters.
Originally, each sign stood for a word. Because words
that could not themselves be pictured were expressed by pictographs of related
objects (for example, god by a star, to stand and to go by a foot), some
signs stood for several different words. Because most Sumerian words are
monosyllabic, the signs were soon used as mere syllables regardless of their
original meaning. Signs that had more than one reading as word signs or logograms
also acquired several syllabic values. This multitude of readings is known
as polyphony. On the other hand, Sumerian has many words that sound alike
(homonyms); syllabic values taken from such homonyms also coincide; they
are known as homophones.
The fully developed cuneiform system had more than
600 signs. About half of these could be used as either logograms or syllables,
the others as logograms only. Word signs also served as determinatives to
indicate the class (such as man, tree, stone) to which a word belonged. The
system remained a mixture of logograms and syllables throughout its existence.
When it was applied to another language, the logograms were simply read in
that language. Although at times a tendency existed to simplify the script
by reducing the number of logograms and the use of polyphony, the step to
an alphabet, in which each sign stands for one sound, was never made in standard
cuneiform; only the Ugaritic and Old Persian scripts reached that stage.
No one guessed the meaning of the wedges when early
travelers found cuneiform in some of the ruins that were discovered, especially
the ruins of Persepolis, in Iran. Pietro della Valle, an Italian traveler,
in 1621 noticed the 413 lines of inscription on the mountain wall at Behistun
in western Iran (see Behistun Inscription) and copied some of the signs.
In 1674 Jean Chardin, a French trader, published complete groups of cuneiforms
and noted that the inscriptions always appeared in sets of three parallel
forms.
The first real progress toward reading the writing
at Behistun was made by Carsten Niebuhr, a German member of a Danish scientific
expedition to the Middle East from 1761 to 1767. He correctly thought the
threefold inscriptions to be transcripts of the same text in three different
kinds of unknown writing and in 1777 he published the first accurate and
complete copies of the Behistun inscriptions. These great trilingual inscriptions
of Darius I, king of Persia, were written in Persian, Elamite (formerly known
as Susian), and Babylonian cuneiforms. The three systems of writing were
used by the Persian kings of the Achaemenid dynasty to make their decrees
known to three subject nations.
The Persian cuneiform was the first of the inscriptions
to be deciphered.The German scholars Oluf Gerhard Tychsen and Georg Friedrich
Grotefend and the Danish philologist Rasmus Christian Rask each identified
several signs. The French Orientalist Eugene Burnouf finally deciphered most
of the signs of the Persian cuneiform system, and the British Assyriologist
Henry Creswicke Rawlinson independently interpreted the text he had copied
afresh from the Behistun rock and published the results in 1846. The task
of deciphering the Persian cuneiform was made easier by existing knowledge
of Pahlavi, a later Persian language.
The Persian is the simplest and the most recent of
all the cuneiform systems. It contains 36 characters that are almost entirely
alphabetic, although they are used also for certain simple syllables. In
addition, the Persian cuneiform system has a word divider. The use of the
Persian cuneiform was confined to the period from 550 to 330 BC. The oldest
example of this cuneiform is probably an inscription of Cyrus the Great at
Pasargadae and the most recent that of Artaxerxes III (reigned 358?-338 BC)
at Persepolis.
The Elamite cuneiform is frequently called the language
of the second form because it appears in the second position of the trilingual
inscriptions of the Achaemenian kings. Decipherment of it was first undertaken
by the Danish Orientalist Neils Ludvig Westergaard in 1844. The fact that
the same text is repeated word for word in each cuneiform of the trilingual
inscriptions was of great importance in translation of the Elamite, in which
no modern language or hitherto known language gave any help. This system
contains 96 syllabic signs, 16 logograms, and 5 determinants.
The readings of the Elamite characters are in general
fairly clear, although some words are still uncertain. The Babylonian version
of the Behistun text was deciphered through the united efforts of the French
Orientalist Jules Oppert, the Irish Orientalist Edward Hincks, the French
archaeologist Louis Frédérick Joseph Caignart de Saulcy, and
Rawlinson. The similarity of the language written in this third cuneiform
system to well-known Semitic dialects was helpful in decipherment.
The Behistun records gave the first clue to deciphering
it, but it is now known that the Babylonian cuneiform was in use more than
2000 years before the Behistun records were inscribed. Many documents of
great antiquity in this cuneiform have been found in Babylon, Nineveh, and
other places near the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. Babylonian cuneiform was
inscribed on seals, cylinders, stone obelisks, statues, and the walls of
palaces. It appears on a great many clay tablets, some as large as 22.8 cm
by 15.2 cm (9 in by 6 in) and others little more than 2.54 cm sq (little
more than 1 in sq). The writing is often very small. Some tablets carry six
lines per 2.54 cm and must be read with a magnifying glass.
Definite proof that the cuneiform signs were originally
pictographs was lacking until early pictographic inscriptions could be found.
The German scholar Friedrich Delitzch in 1897 opposed the view that cuneiform
signs were originally pictographs, holding instead that they developed from
a comparatively small number of basic signs. Combinations of such basic signs,
he held, yielded in the course of time hundreds of cuneiform signs. The theory
was received with mixed approval, but most scholars inclined toward the theory
of pictorial origin.
The principle of pictorial origin was finally established
in 1913 by the American Orientalist George Aaron Bartonin The Origin and
Development of Babylonian Writing, which presented a collection of 288
pictographs found in early cuneiform inscriptions and traced their development.
According to Barton, the original signs were modeled after the human body
and its parts and after mammals, birds, insects, fishes, trees, stars and
clouds, earth and water, buildings, boats, household furniture and utensils,
fire, weapons, clothing, implements of worship, nets, traps, pottery, and
musical instruments. Excavations conducted by German archaeologists from
1928 to 1931 at Erech (Uruk), on the site of present-day Al Warka', Iraq,
yielded the oldest-known examples of pictograph writing on clay tablets.
The translation of cuneiform writing has contributed
greatly to present knowledge of early Assyria and Babylonia and the Middle
East in general. The cuneiform Code of Hammurabi is one of the most important
documents to emerge from pre-Christian antiquity. Other tablets have helped
to clarify the history of ancient Egypt. A cuneiform script discovered in
1929 during the French excavations of Ra's Shamrah in North Syria has proven
to be an alphabet of consonants; it was estimated to have been in use from
about 1400 to 1200 BC. The mythological texts written in this so-called Ra's
Shamrah cuneiform alphabet have thrown light on the religious life of ancient
Syria and have bearing upon the reinterpretation of some aspects of the Bible.
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