They were called the Twelve Tablets.
The Romans wrote in Latin. They wrote on wax tablets.
The Romans did have a kind of paper made from reeds, and wrote on animal skins, but this was too expensive for children to write on. Schoolboys would write on wax tablets with a pointed stick called a stylus. They then rubbed the wax smooth and started again.
In the initial general legislation 12: The law of the Twelve Tablets. More generally, they wrote on tablets all the time as it was the best means of preserving writing until the introduction of parchment.
the sumerians were the first one's to develop a language called cuneiform. they wrote on clay tablets with stylus.
'''The romans did have a kind of paper made from reeds, and wrote on animal skins, but this was too expensive for children to write on. Schoolboys would write on wax tablets with a pointed metal stylus. They then rubbed the wax smooth and started again.'''
The Romans did have a kind of paper made from reeds, and wrote on animal skins, but this was too expensive for children to write on. Schoolboys would write on wax tablets with a pointed stick called a stylus. They then rubbed the wax smooth and started again.
The Babylonians were a Mesopotamian civilization, as were all ancient civilizations between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Mesopotamian civilizations, such as the Sumerians and the Babylonians, wrote using a system called "cuneiform." Cuneiform gets it's name from the Latin cuneus, meaning wedge. This Is because cuneiform was written with a wedge shaped stylus, usually made for twigs or copper. Unlike the Egyptians, the Babylonians did not use paper, but a soft clay tablet to write into. Of course, words were also written into stone, for example the very famous Hammurabi's Code. For this styluses made of harder materials (like copper) were used.
The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.The Romans wrote with a stylus on wax tablets for quick notes. These could be rubbed out and reused. For formal or permanent writing they used papyrus, a reed pen and ink. At times writing was done on thin wooden sheets with ink, as found at the fort at Vindolanda.
stylus
They wrote on clay tablets.
Best Answer:None. Tertius is the one who wrote the book of Romans (NKJV Romans 16:22) - "I, Tertius, who wrote this epistle, greet you in the Lord."
The ancient Romans wrote in two languages. they wrote in their native Latin and many of the scholars also wrote in Greek.