Mesopotamians wrote cuneiform on clay tablets, which were made from a mixture of clay and water. Once inscribed with a stylus, these tablets were often baked or air-dried to preserve the writing. Cuneiform, one of the earliest writing systems, was used for various purposes, including record-keeping, literature, and legal documents. The tablets provide invaluable insights into the culture, economy, and governance of ancient Mesopotamia.
stylus
T. H. White wrote The Sword in the Stone.
The Egyptians wrote on Papyrus which was an early form of paper. They also wrote in tombs and on special objects which were in turn placed in the tomb.They used reed pens, sticks and other sharp objects to write or carve into paper or walls/objects.
ANSWERHammurabi spoke Akkadian and wrote in the emerging written text of cuneiform. Cuneiform started as a pictograph, a symbolic way to record trades and stories. Then over a few thousand years, it developed into straight marks and wedge shapes that represent phonetic sounds. The latter being a much quicker way to write, as the symbols for objects run into the thousands and sounds can be reduced to a few hundred strokes.
They used the reeds to make boats and also papyrus which is a type of paper they wrote on. They used the water from the tigris and euphrates river to irrigate their crops, and they used the clay by the river to build buildings.
a stylus ( reed pen used for writing on wet clay).
The Mesopotamians wrote the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Code of Hammurabi using cuneiform script on clay tablets. Cuneiform was one of the earliest forms of writing, characterized by wedge-shaped symbols. These texts provided valuable insights into ancient Mesopotamian culture, beliefs, and laws.
They wrote with sharp objects. They wrote on clay tablets or animal skin.
They are clay tablets that scribes wrote cuneiform on, normally to record business deals.
They used sharpened sticks to write and they wrote on clay tablets.
The worlds fist system of writing...they wrote on clay tablets with a stylus
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 sumerians were the first one's to develop a language called cuneiform. they wrote on clay tablets with stylus.
People in ancient Mesopotamia wrote in cuneiform on clay tablets using a wedge-shaped stylus. These clay tablets were also baked in the sun to harden them and preserve the writing. Cuneiform was primarily used for administrative, economic, and religious purposes in Sumerian, Akkadian, and other Mesopotamian cultures.
The first books were on stone tablets and they wrote them with chisels engraved on to the stone
The people who wrote in cuneiform were scribes. They were highly trained individuals responsible for recording information on clay tablets using a wedge-shaped stylus. Scribes played a crucial role in ancient Mesopotamian society by documenting everything from administrative records to literature and religious texts.
Mesopotamians wrote about a lot of things. They kept records for the king, kids wrote essays and stuff for school, and they wrote on clay tablets to keep track of their livestock, sorta like the kind of stuff we write about today.