They are clay tablets that scribes wrote cuneiform on, normally to record business deals.
Clay mixed with blood of the gods.
the sumerians were the first one's to develop a language called cuneiform. they wrote on clay tablets with stylus.
Babylon
The Babylonian Empire was a newer version of Mesopotamia. Cuneiform, the script language of ancient Sumer in Mesopotamia, consists of small, repetitive impressed characters that look more like wedge-shape footprints than what we recognize as writing. Those writings appear on baked clay or mud tablets that range in color from bone white to chocolate to charcoal. Inscriptions were also made on pots and bricks. Each cuneiform sign consists of one or more wedge-shaped impressions that are made with three basic marks: a triangle, a line or curbed lines made with dashes.
the Babylonian god of justice was Marduk ...... i think.
The hero of a Babylonian flood myth whose story is preserved on clay tablets dating to the 17th century B.C.
Most of the official records were kept on clay tablets. The official code of law was carved on black diorite stone.
Clay tablets were made out of clay that was easily found by the rivers of Tigris and Euphrates.
who used clay tablets are the Egyptians
Clay tablets were used by Sumerian civilization. Another word for ''clay tablets'' it's called cuneiform.Cuneiformdocuments were written onclay tablets, by means of a blunt reed for a stylus.
Clay
Clay is strong
The Babylonians used cuneiform to write the Akkadian and Babylonian Languages. Cuneiform tablets were written by pressing reed styluses to clay blocks and then left to harden.
Clay is strong
They used it for the clay tablets they wrote on and pottery.
Cuneiform was used on clay tablets primarily in ancient Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq and Iran) from around 3500 BCE to the 1st century CE. It was used to write various languages of the region, including Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian, and Babylonian.
Writing on clay tablets provided a durable medium for recording information in ancient civilizations. The clay tablets were long-lasting and resistant to the elements, allowing important texts and records to be preserved for centuries. Additionally, the inscriptions on clay tablets were difficult to alter, providing a sense of security for keeping records accurate.