|
To receive daily emails from Breaking Christian News to your inbox CLICK HERE
"History Mystery" Decoded: It's No Coincidence That Modern Communication is Connected to Ancient Writers"The links from the ancient past to our alphabet today are no coincidence." — Dr. Philippa Steele
The project, called Contexts of and Relations between Early Writing Systems (CREWS for short), is to focus on exploring how writing developed during the 2nd and 1st millennia BC in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East, and will investigate how different writing systems and the cultures that used them were related to each other. The project is led by Dr. Philippa Steele of the University's Faculty of Classics. Described as an "innovative and interdisciplinary approach to the history of writing" the CREWS project aims to enrich our understanding of linguistic, cultural and social aspects of the use, borrowing and development of writing in the ancient world - which can uncover some often surprising links to our modern-day written culture. For example, today the notion of "alphabetical order" is used to arrange everything from dictionaries to telephone books, but why is the alphabet organized the way it is?
The destruction of Ugarit in around 1200 BC was not the end for alphabetical order. The Phoenicians, living in what is now modern Syria and Lebanon, used the same order for their own alphabet. While their language was related to Ugaritic, their writing system was not. Instead of cuneiform wedge-shapes, the Phoenicians used linear letters, which were much more similar to those we use in English today. The Phoenician alphabet began with the letters Alep, Bet, Gimel, Dalet, which are strikingly similar to our own A, B, C and D. Dr. Steele said: "The links from the ancient past to our alphabet today are no coincidence. The Greeks borrowed the Phoenician writing system and they still kept the same order of signs: Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta. They transported the alphabet to Italy, where it was passed on to the Etruscans, and also to the Romans, who still kept the same order: A, B, C, D, which is why our modern alphabet is the way it is today." That such an apparently simple idea remained so stable and powerful over thousands of years of cultural change and movement is an historic mystery. "The answer cannot be purely linguistic," Dr. Steele said. "There must have been considerable social importance attached to the idea of the alphabet having a particular order. It matters who was doing the writing and what they were using writing for." The origin of the alphabet is just one of the areas that the CREWS project will explore, along with the social and political context of writing, and drivers of language change, literacy and communication. Because of the high level of interconnectedness in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East, ideas could be spread widely as people moved, traded and interacted with different cultures. "Globalization is not a purely modern phenomenon," Dr. Steele commented. "We might have better technology to pursue it now, but essentially we are engaging in the same activities as our ancestors." The CREWS project is the result of a long-term innovative program of combined and comparative research at the University of Cambridge. It will run for five years and will involve a four-person team working on a variety of ancient cultures and writing systems. The CREWS project has been made possible thanks to the European Research Council, who describe their mission as being "to encourage the highest-quality research in Europe." Dr. Steele, the Principal Investigator on the project and a Senior Research Fellow at Magdalene College, Cambridge, has worked on ancient languages and writing systems for over ten years and previously specialized in the languages of ancient Cyprus. She said: "Cyprus lies right in the middle of an area where ancient people were moving about by land and sea and swapping technologies and ideas. That was one of the inspirations of the CREWS project. By studying how and what ancient people were writing, we will be able to gain more insight into their interactions with each other in ways that have never been fully understood before."
To receive daily emails from Breaking Christian News to your inbox CLICK HERE
Other Recent Articles from Breaking Christian News Trump's FDA Indicates Move Away from Testing on Dogs, Bunnies, Chimpanzees Chicago Bulls Dump Player after His Criticism of Pride Month Finally Confirmed: Michigan Synagogue Car Ramming Was 'Hezbollah-Inspired' Terror Attack SURPRISE! Zohran Mamdani's New 'Free' Childcare Program is Going to Cost $60,000 Per Child Courtroom Bombshell: ATF Can't Link Bullet That Killed Charlie Kirk to Suspect's Rifle SCOTUS Rules on Colorado's Ban on 'Conversion Therapy' to Help Gender Dysphoric Individuals President Trump Shares Letter on Palm Sunday, from Franklin Graham Discussing Salvation HSLDA Lawyer Warns This Bill Would Create a 'Surveillance State' for Homeschooling Families Major Airports Return to Normal as TSA Workers Get Paid GROTESQUE: Barack Obama's Orwellian Push for Virginia Redistricting Is Something to Behold Not 'Leaderless': the 'No Kings' Protests Are Well-Funded by These Notorious Billionaires Ilhan Omar's Connection to Genocide in Somaliland, and Fraud in the US; Will She Be Deported? Prayer Alert: Nigerian Christians Massacred on Palm Sunday Explosive Intel Report: Ukraine War Aid May Have Been Funneled to Biden Campaign, DNC Congress Requests Documents after Reports on California Hospice Fraud Search the Articles Archives |
All articles on this site and emails from BCN are copyrighted property of Breaking Christian News. Permission is given to link to, or share a BCN story if proper attribution is given to both the original writer and summarizer of the story. Breaking Christian News 2005-2019. All Rights Reserved.
Breaking Christian News is a division of Elijah List Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Disclaimer: Articles and links, as well as the source articles linked to; do not necessarily reflect the opinion of Breaking Christian News.
| Home | Store | Subscribe | Facebook | Article Archive |