Image of the Edwin Smith Papyrus medical and herbal text written - TopicsExpress



          

Image of the Edwin Smith Papyrus medical and herbal text written on a scroll found in ancient Kemet dating back thousands of years. Written hieratic, (an Kemetic cursive form of hieroglyphs), 16th-17th dynasty and said to be copied from the old kingdom. (Ancient African Writing) Ancient Africa has the worlds oldest and largest collection of ancient writing systems. Evidence of such dates to pre -historic time, and can be found in various regions of the continent. By contrast, continental Europes oldest writing, Greek, was not fully in use until c. 1400 BC (a clay tablet found in Iklaina, Greece) and is largely derived from an older African script called Proto-Sinaitic. The oldest Asian writing, Proto- Cuneiform, dates to around 3000 BC (clay texts found at Jemdet Nasr). However, the oldest known African writing systems are several centuries older. Proto Saharan (5000 - 3000 BC) Perhaps the worlds oldest known from of writing are inscriptions of what some archaeologists and linguists have termed, Proto Saharan near the Kharga oasis west of so -called Nubia that date to at least 5,000 BC. The writings under the image that looks like the Nilotic god Seth show similarities to later writing systems such as Tifinagh and Vai. Nsbidi (5000 BC - present) Nsibidi is an ancient script used to communicate in various languages in West Central Africa. Most notably used by the Uguakima and Ejagham (Ekoi) people of Nigeria and Cameroon, Nsibidi is also used by the nearby Ebe, Efik, Ibibio, Igbo, and Uyanga people. The script is believed to date back to 5000 BC, but the oldest archaeological evidence ever found dates it to 2000 BC (monoliths in Ikom, Nigeria). Similar to the Kemetic Medu Neter, Nsibidi is a system of standardized pictographs. In fact, both Nsibidi and Medu Neter share several of the exact same characters. Medu Neter or Ta Merrian Hieroglyphs (4000 BC - 600 AD) The word Medu Neter (MDW W NTR) literally means tongue of God or more loosely, Gods words. The English word, hieroglyphs, is derived from the Greek word, hieroglyphikos, which means sacred engraving, similar to the basic meaning of Medu Neter. This script is an elaborate a logosyllabic writing system in which symbols represent either words (concepts) and consonal phoenetic sounds, or both, depending on the context. The oldest known evidence for this writing system come from pre -dynastic pottery at Gerzeh (c. 4000 - 3500 BC; Gerzean culture), which is located about 100 miles south of Ha Ka Ptah (Giza), and from inscriptions found at Gebel Sheikh Suleiman (Wadi Halfa; 4000 - 3500 BC; Nubian A-Group culture) in so -called Nubia. The next oldest form of Medu Neter dates between 3300 and 3200 BC and found in Abdu (tomb of the so - called Scorpion suten in Abydos) on clay tablets that recorded oil and linen deliveries. During the so -called dynastic period (3100 BC - 500 AD), Medu Neter was used on the oldest of all historical texts, the Narmer Palette (3100 BC), then widely used in the metaphysical/spiritual Pyramid texts (2400 - 2200 BC), coffin texts (2200 -2000 BC), and the scientific, spiritual and administrative papyri (1825 -600 BC). Kemetic Hieratic (3200 BC - 600 AD) The term, Hieratic was first coined by Saint Clement of Alexandria (c 200 AD), a Greek theologian who used the term grammata hieratika or priestly/sacerdotal writing. Although many scholars contend that Hieratic developed as an entirely distinct script from the Medu Neter, the obvious visual similarities prove that it is also a somewhat simplified form of the Medu Neter that was mainly used for more administrative and scientific documents throughout the dynastic history of both Kemet and Kush (3200 BC - 600 AD). However, linquists have also shown similaries between it and the alphabetic Proto-Saharan or Thinite writing. Thinite (3200 -2700 BC) Pottery inscriptions found near the legendary city of Tjenu or Thinis in Upper Kemet (located between Abdu and Waset) are strikingly similar to Proto-Saharan writing mentioned above. According to Menetho, Tjenu is said to be home of Menes, who united Lower and Upper Kemet, and established the first unified dynasty. fanagh or Lybico -Berber or Mande (c. 3000 BC - present) Rock paintings at Oued Mertoutek in southern Algeria show the earliest signs if the so -called Lybico -Berber or early Tifinagh writing system and date to 3000 BC. Tifanagh is still used by Amajegh (Tauregs), who mainly inhabit a vast area of West Africa, including present -day Mali, Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso, Southern Algeria and Southern Libya, are the only known group of Tamazight speakers who have used the Tifanagh script continuously since antiquity (in recent years, however, the larger Tamazight speaking community of the Sahara region have adopted use of the Tifanagh script). Vai (3000 BC - present) Vai is one of the worlds oldest alphabetic scripts in continuous use, with over 150,000 users in present -day Liberia and Sierra Leone. Its a highly advanced syllabary writing system with over 210 distinct characters representing various consonants and vowel sounds used in the Vai language (a descendant of ancient Mande). Contrary to popular belief, Vai is not a wholly unique script invented circa 1830 by a West African whose friends helped him remember a dream. Evidence of its antiquity comes from inscriptions from Goundaka, Mali that date to 3000 BC, and Vais close similarity and relation to the older Proto-Saharan and Tifanagh writing found all over the Saharan region. Vai has also been linked to other writing systems in West Africa that were allegedly invented in the 1800s by people who had similar dreams. Even in the Americas, Vai is similar to scripts that were supposedly invented by Africans who, again, were coincidentally inspired by their dreams (e.g., the so -called Afaka script shares at least 34 of its 56 characters or 61% with those of the Vai script). Wadi El-Hol or Proto-Sinaitic (2000 BC - 1400 BC) In 1999, Yale University archaeologists identified an alphabetic script in Wadi El-Hol, a narrow valley between Waset (Thebes) and Abdu (Abydos) in Southern Kemet. Dating to about 1900 BC, it bears resemblance to Medu Neter, but also the much older Proto- Saharan writing system. A similar inscription that dates to 1500 BC was found in Serabit el-Khadim on Africas Sinai peninsula, and is likely the basis for the so -called Proto Canaanite and Phoenician scripts (all of which are descendants of Proto-Saharan). Most importantly, the find provides proof that Phoenician writing was born in Africa. Meroitic or Napatan (800 BC - 600 AD) The so -called Meroitic script was developed sometime around 800 BC in Napata, the new capital of Ethiopia or Kush, and remained in use after the capital moved to Meroe until the 7th century AD. Thus a more appropriate name for the script would be Napatan, in reference to the first known place of use. Archaelogists have found countless stelae (such as the one shown at right), in addition to inscriptions on temple walls and statues which have the script, and few linguists have ever attempted to translate the text. Contrary to popular belief, the Napatan script has been deciphered and is found to be a wholly African language, with close similarities to modern languages of Taman (spoken in Darfur and Chad), Niyma (in Northern Sudan) and Nubian (Southern Egypt). Geez or Ethiopic (800 BC - present) The Geez script is an advanced syllabary script consisting of 231 characters used to communicate in several Ethiopic languages. It is unquestionably one of the oldest writing systems in continuous use anywhere in the world. Although the original Geez language is only used in Ethiopian and Eritrean Tawahedo Orthodox churches and the Beta Israel churches, the Geez script is mainly used by speakers of Amharic, Tigre and Tigrinya, among others. The oldest known evidence of Geez writing can be found on the Hawulti stela, which dates to the pre -Aksumite-era or roughly 800 BC. Therefore, evidence suggests Geez could be older than the Old Ethiopian script, even though the latter appears to be more primitive than the former. Old Ethiopian or Sabaean (700 BC - 600 AD) Sabean is another ancient African syllabary script that is similar to Geez and a descendant of the Proto-Saharan system. The word Sabaean itself derives from the Western name, Sheba (from the Geez word, Saba, whom modern Ethiopians call Makeda), the Dmt leader to whom the Sabaean or Old Ethiopian script is attributed. Sabaean is found all over Ethiopia and Yemen, a former colony of ancient Ethiopias Dmt empire. It is important to reiterate that the Arabian peninsula was first colonized by Ethiopians, not vice versa, as attested in ancient literature (see page on the history of Ethiopia/Kush). Secondly, the oldest examples of the Sabaean script are inscriptions at the Temple of Yeha in modern -day Ethiopia, which local historians generally date to 700 BC. There are also several inscriptions at Aksum, the principal city (perhaps not the only one) from which Queen Makeda reigned. Not only is the Old Ethiopian inscription at Yeha older than any others ever found on the Arabian peninsula, there are subtle differences, as clearly noted by some 19th century linguists such as James Theodore Bent, David Heinrich Mueller, and John George Garson. In other words, Old Ethiopian is older and somehwat different than the so -called Old Arabian/Sabaean script. READ MORE HERE: taneter.org/writing.html
Posted on: Sat, 02 Aug 2014 20:43:38 +0000

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