The same reason why you do, and probably more, by reading the nature of your question (yes it's an insult).
The produced the form of alphabetic writing which was adopted and adapted by Greeks, Israelites, Romans and today's European languages.
Greeks
Greeks have their own alphabet, which has it's roots int he same place as the Roman Alphabet which we use today.
The Greeks primarily used two writing systems: the older system known as Linear B, which was used for Mycenaean Greek from the 14th to the 12th century BCE, and the later system known as the Greek alphabet, which was developed around the 8th century BCE and is still used today for writing Greek. Linear B was primarily used for administrative and economic purposes, while the Greek alphabet became the primary script for literary and everyday writing.
yes they even had genesis
They are characters.
Plays, poetry, histories, and inscriptions.
Font is the type writing available for computers or typewriters today; they wrote in their own language by hand.
the Phoenicians invented an alphabet that the Greeks adapted it for their use by adding vowels and changing the direction of writing to left-to-right.
The Etruscans, who got it from the Greeks.
Eighth Century BCE.
Romans and Greeks use papyrus to write on.