Well, actually none, EXCEPT, the Inca. The used Quipa. A system of ropes tied in knots. Knots would be tied accordingly to represent certain words.
Cuneiform was first developed in Sumer (Mesopotamia) - and is estimated to have began sometime in the 30th century BC.
The Olmec legacy is primarily characterized by their monumental stone sculptures, early forms of writing, and influence on later Mesoamerican cultures. A statement that does not apply to the Olmec legacy would be that they were the first to develop a fully functional written language, as this achievement is more accurately attributed to later civilizations like the Maya. Additionally, attributing the construction of large pyramids solely to the Olmecs overlooks the contributions and advancements made by other civilizations in the region.
They are both ancient civilizations that developed along rivers, developed forms of writing, and supported expanded empires.They were based around rivers, and developed written language.
Mesopotamians used cuneiform, which was a system of writing involving pictographs or symbols pressed into clay tablets using a stylus. It was one of the earliest forms of writing in ancient civilizations and was primarily used for administrative and record-keeping purposes.
The Chinese were the ones to create caligraphy , one of the first forms of writing
The Sumerians originally developed writing for tax records, and it gradually expanded from that.
Cunieform is one and it developed in mesopotamia
The cuneiform - Sumer. The hieroglyphic writing - Ancient Egypt.
Hieroglyphics and cuneiform helped develop early forms of writing and communication in ancient civilizations such as Egypt and Mesopotamia. They were crucial for record-keeping, literature, and administrative purposes, contributing to the spread of knowledge and cultural exchange. These writing systems paved the way for the evolution of written languages and the preservation of historical texts.
The conversion from hunter/gather to farming forms of subsistence.
Cuneiform was first developed in Sumer (Mesopotamia) - and is estimated to have began sometime in the 30th century BC.
Nothing. By the time writing was invented, we were past the Neolithic and into the Bronze Age. In the Neolithic the closest thing they had to writing was cave painting; but that depicted things and images, not language and ideas.
Early civilizations developed other forms of art as well.
3,000 b.C.
to communicate with people who were far away
The Olmec legacy is primarily characterized by their monumental stone sculptures, early forms of writing, and influence on later Mesoamerican cultures. A statement that does not apply to the Olmec legacy would be that they were the first to develop a fully functional written language, as this achievement is more accurately attributed to later civilizations like the Maya. Additionally, attributing the construction of large pyramids solely to the Olmecs overlooks the contributions and advancements made by other civilizations in the region.
The Celts primarily relied on oral tradition for the transmission of their history, stories, and knowledge. They did not have a standardized writing system like the Romans or Greeks. While some Celtic cultures had primitive forms of writing, they were not widely used or developed in the same way as the written languages of other ancient civilizations.