Scribes were the intellectuals of ancient Egypt who were in the higher rank along with priests ad educated dignitaries. Scribes occupied the uppers rungs of the social ladder to the very top.
Scribes were those who gave orders, checked results, took records, granted or witheld permission. Egyptians turned to them for all kinds of help such as reading, writing letters, or creating a marriage contract.
The Scribes' duties were to keep record of:
Building supplies, Tools and craftsmen's requisites, work attendance, wages paid, number of bags of grain harvested, size of herds, amounts of grain and materials, inventory of funerary gifts and goods, Kinds and quantities of any seized goods, as well as inventories of the daily offerings and sacrifices from the funerary priests in honour of the deceased.
scribe were so valuable in sumer because not all sumerians knew how to write. they were also the only people who kept written records.
because they were the only ones that could write
They were the only ones who knew how to write.
because it was the job that was used mpre then all
As in many countries where the majority of people were and are illiterate, scribes performed a very useful function in enabling people to communicate with one another at a distance. Also, their function was to be present at ceremonial occasions to record the details, so that in the future it would not be necessary to rely on people's memory of the event. The ancient Egyptians had very meticulous record-keeping systems for their harvests, building works, etc., and all this information would have been noted down by the scribes. So much of what we know today about ancient Egypt is due to the existence of the scribes and the artists (painters), who were really another kind of scribe, as the ancient Egyptians used hieroglyphics, which were a kind picture-writing, as they did not use letters to make words as most Western languages do today.
No, the ancient GREEKS did it, then the Romans copied, and so on and so on...
because they were the only ones that could write
They had to piant pictures on the walls of tombs for the deseased.
Scribes were honored because they held records and accounts. Scribes also wrote and copied religious and literary texts.
They were the only ones who knew how to write.
Important jobs in ancient Egypt included soldiers, scribes, artists, and peasants. Most jobs were inherited. If your father was a farmer, so were you. Anyone, however, could learn to be a scribe if they had the talent. Learning to be a script was a complicated process. Scribes went to scribe school. Most who attended did not pass the course. In ancient Egypt, everything was written down, especially lists. Scribes were in high demand. Good scribes could work their way up, all the way to Pharaoh's court.
There were different classes of people in ancient Egypt. At the top of the pyramid was the ruler of the city-state, under that was the government people working for them, under that was the scribes, under that was the artisans, and under that was the farmers. So it goes: Rulers Government officials Scribes Artisans Farmers Sixth grade social studies. :)
because it was the job that was used mpre then all
scribes were important on Egypt to record tings that were happenng in the town like birth deth and so on.
Scribes were among the most respected workers in ancient Egypt. Following the religious god Thoth, they are depicted in hieroglyphics as having used wooden palettes, brushes, pens made from Nile reeds and rolls of papyrus. Scribes in training practiced on a substance called ostraca, which is a piece of easily attainable pottery or stone that was less expensive to make. Red and black were the primary colors of their ink, typically made of a mixture of soot, gum and red oxide.
Because the ancient Egyptians honored their pharaoh as a god. They believed that the pharaoh controlled the weather and everything that happened in ancient Egypt. They did that so that the pharaoh would be pleased by his people and greet them back with life.
Scribes kept all kinds of records and so they have variety of jobs.
As in many countries where the majority of people were and are illiterate, scribes performed a very useful function in enabling people to communicate with one another at a distance. Also, their function was to be present at ceremonial occasions to record the details, so that in the future it would not be necessary to rely on people's memory of the event. The ancient Egyptians had very meticulous record-keeping systems for their harvests, building works, etc., and all this information would have been noted down by the scribes. So much of what we know today about ancient Egypt is due to the existence of the scribes and the artists (painters), who were really another kind of scribe, as the ancient Egyptians used hieroglyphics, which were a kind picture-writing, as they did not use letters to make words as most Western languages do today.