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History
of Writing Instruments |
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Part
1: From cave paintings to
the quill pen -- how ink,
paper and pens were all were
invented. |
The
history of writing instruments by which
humans have recorded and conveyed
thoughts, feelings and grocery lists, is
the history of civilization itself. This
is how we know the story of us, by the
drawings, signs and words we have
recorded.
The
cave man's first inventions were the
hunting club (not the auto security
device) and the handy sharpened-stone,
the all-purpose skinning and killing
tool. The latter was adapted into the
first writing instrument. The cave man
scratched pictures with the
sharpened-stone tool onto the walls of
his cave dwelling. The cave drawings
represented events in daily life such as
the planting of crops or hunting
victories.
With
time, the record-keepers developed
systematized symbols from their drawings.
These symbols represented words and
sentences, but were easier and faster to
draw and universally recognized for
meaning. The discovery of clay made
portable records possible (you can't
carry a cave wall around with you).
Early merchants used clay tokens with
pictographs to record the quantities of
materials traded or shipped. These
tokens date back to about 8,500 B.C.
With the high volume of and the
repetition inherent in record keeping,
pictographs evolved and slowly lost
their picture detail. They became
abstract-figures representing sounds in
spoken communication. The
alphabet replaced pictographs
between 1700 and 1500 B.C. in the
Sinaitic world. The current Hebrew
alphabet and writing became popular
around 600 B.C. About 400 B.C. the Greek
alphabet was developed. Greek was the
first script written from left to right.
From Greek followed the Byzantine and
the Roman (later Latin) writings. In the
beginning, all writing systems had only
uppercase letters, when the writing
instruments were refined enough for
detailed faces, lowercase was used as
well (around 600 A.D.)
The
earliest means of writing that
approached pen and paper as we know them
today was developed by the Greeks. They
employed a writing stylus, made of metal,
bone or ivory, to place marks upon
wax-coated tablets. The tablets made in
hinged pairs, closed to protect the
scribe's notes. The first examples of
handwriting (purely text messages made
by hand) originated in Greece. The
Grecian scholar, Cadmus invented the
written letter - text messages on paper
sent from one individual to another.
Writing was advancing beyond chiseling
pictures into stone or wedging
pictographs into wet clay. The Chinese
invented and perfected 'Indian Ink'.
Originally designed for blacking the
surfaces of raised stone-carved
hieroglyphics, the ink was a mixture of
soot from pine smoke and lamp oil mixed
with the gelatin of donkey skin and musk.
The ink invented by the Chinese
philosopher, Tien-Lcheu (2697 B.C.),
became common by the year 1200 B.C.
Other cultures developed inks using the
natural dyes and colors derived from
berries, plants and minerals. In early
writings, different colored inks had
ritual meaning attached to each color.
The
invention of inks paralleled the
introduction of paper. The early
Egyptians, Romans, Greeks and Hebrews,
used papyrus and parchment papers. One
of the oldest pieces of writing on
papyrus known to us today is the
Egyptian "Prisse Papyrus" which dates
back to 2000 B.C. The Romans created a
reed-pen perfect for parchment and ink,
from the hollow tubular-stems of marsh
grasses, especially from the jointed
bamboo plant. They converted bamboo
stems into a primitive form of fountain
pen. They cut one end into the form of a
pen nib or point. A writing fluid or ink
filled the stem, squeezing the reed
forced fluid to the nib.
By 400
A.D. a stable form of ink developed, a
composite of iron-salts, nutgalls and
gum, the basic formula, which was to
remain in use for centuries. Its color
when first applied to paper was a
bluish-black, rapidly turning into a
darker black and then over the years
fading to the familiar dull brown color
commonly seen in old documents.
Wood-fiber paper was invented in China
in 105 A.D. but it only became known
about (due to Chinese secrecy) in Japan
around 700 A.D. and brought to Spain by
the Arabs in 711 A.D. Paper was not
widely used throughout Europe until
paper mills were built in the late 14th
century.
The
writing instrument that dominated for
the longest period in history (over
one-thousand years) was the quill pen.
Introduced around 700 A.D., the quill is
a pen made from a bird feather. The
strongest quills were those taken from
living birds in the spring from the five
outer left wing feathers. The left wing
was favored because the feathers curved
outward and away when used by a
right-handed writer. Goose feathers were
most common; swan feathers were of a
premium grade being scarcer and more
expensive. For making fine lines, crow
feathers were the best, and then came
the feathers of the eagle, owl, hawk and
turkey.
Quill
pens lasted for only a week before it
was necessary to replace them. There
were other disadvantages associated with
their use, including a lengthy
preparation time. The early European
writing parchments made from animal
skins, required much scraping and
cleaning. A lead and a ruler made
margins. To sharpen the quill, the
writer needed a special knife (origins
of the term "pen-knife".) Beneath the
writer's high-top desk was a coal stove,
used to dry the ink as fast as possible.
Plant-fiber paper became the primary
medium for writing after another
dramatic invention took place: Johannes
Gutenberg invented the printing press
with replaceable wooden or metal letters
in 1436. Simpler kinds of printing e.g.
stamps with names, used much earlier in
China, did not find their way to Europe.
During the centuries, many newer
printing technologies were developed
based on Gutenberg's printing machine
e.g. offset printing.
Articles written by hand had resembled
printed letters until scholars began to
change the form of writing, using
capitals and small letters, writing with
more of a slant and connecting letters.
Gradually writing became more suitable
to the speed the new writing instruments
permitted. The credit of inventing
Italian 'running hand' or cursive
handwriting with its Roman capitals and
small letters, goes to Aldus Manutius of
Venice, who departed from the old set
forms in 1495 A.D. By the end of the
16th century, the old Roman capitals and
Greek letterforms transformed into the
twenty-six alphabet letters we know
today, both for upper and lower-case
letters.
When
writers had both better inks and paper,
and handwriting had developed into both
an art form and an everyday occurrence,
man's inventive nature once again turned
to improving the writing instrument,
leading to the development of the modern
fountain pen.
Continue
with >>
The History of
the Fountain Pen
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