Once upon a time the archeologists found a stone called the Rosetta stone. On the stone there was a text written in 3 different languages including Acient Greek, another one, and the Hyrogliphics. And by then they were already able of decrypting the ancient Greek and because of the fact that it was the same text they were able to know the meaning of the hyrogliphics.
No. Scribes only taught other apprentice scribes. The general public was not taught how to read.
The Scribes. This was one of their chief duties. God had given the Israelites the law, which included rules that pertained to lepers, and it was the scribe's duty to teach the Law of Moses to the people.
Scribes in ancient Judea taught about the Jewish religion. They debated certain aspects of the Bible and recorded important events in Jewish history.
Hyrogliphics.
they were probably made like the abcs
hyrogliphics
It depends on country and culture. In ancient Israel, they taught about the Bible as part of their tasks. In other cultures, they were a professional class that wrote down laws, history and the deeds of kings or copied earlier writings. Or whose members simply were a 'pen for hire' for anyone who had a message to send and couldn't write. These scribes did teach, namely the art of writing to a younger generation of professional scribes or to well-off citizens who could afford to have someone teach them.
it was written in hyrogliphics
it was written in hyrogliphics
hyrogliphics-emni
Hyrogliphics is the earliest form of writing by the Egyptians.
* those would be called hyrogliphics * Hieroglyphic * Hiertic * Demotic