Team Cuneiform Profile picture
'cos cuneiform is cool. Koska nuolenpääkirjoitus on siistiä. We're undergrad students from the University of Helsinki.
Dec 23, 2020 13 tweets 5 min read
Fact 23: Not all "cuneiform writing" actually meant something. Sometimes just imitating the general appearance of cuneiform-like signs could be enough — why bother to learn the whole complex writing system if others can't read it anyway? Such “pseudo-cuneiform” text is known from some seals and charms, like these Lamaštu amulets (britishmuseum.org/collection/obj… & britishmuseum.org/collection/obj…). Presumably the intended viewers couldn't read cuneiform, so it didn't matter if the signs were nonsense. They still looked impressive!
Dec 22, 2020 9 tweets 0 min read
Dec 16, 2020 12 tweets 5 min read
Fact 16: Akkadian (Babylonian, Assyrian) cuneiform and Japanese writing system have surprisingly many common features. In this short thread we’ll show some of them. #AdventCalendar An old painting of a Japanese nobleman sitting & Japanese wrA cuneiform tablet Basics of Akkadian & Japanese
- both mix logograms (word signs) & phonetic signs
- both write syllables, not invidual sounds
-…but neither is purely syllabic, often you need two signs for one syllable
- both have signs which can be read in more than one way, depending on context A meme comic, in which a bird tells how many readings one cuA screenshot oa Japanese dictionary showing the kanji charac
Dec 15, 2020 8 tweets 5 min read
Fact 15: Many kinds of texts were written in cuneiform. While inscriptions carved in stone often feature the great deeds of kings, plenty of everyday letters, contracts, accounting documents and even school exercises have also survived on clay tablets. Image The earliest proto-cuneiform tablets were mostly numerical accounts of things like grain, livestock, trade goods or even people — basically ancient spreadsheets — with little if any actual written text. Yes, accounting was invented before writing! Image