Writing and City Life
Class 11 History Chapter 1 explores how writing emerged in ancient Mesopotamia — the land between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers in present-day Iraq — and how it was inseparably linked to the rise of city life, trade, and social organisation.
- 1Mesopotamia — from Greek mesos (middle) and potamos (river) — lay between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, now part of the Republic of Iraq, and was the birthplace of the world's earliest cities and writing.
- 2The first Mesopotamian tablets date to around 3200 BCE; they contained picture-like signs and numbers listing goods — oxen, fish, bread loaves — brought into or distributed from the temples of Uruk.
- 3Cuneiform script (from Latin cuneus, 'wedge') was pressed into wet clay tablets using a sharpened reed; signs represented syllables, so scribes had to learn hundreds of signs — writing was a skilled craft and an intellectual achievement.
- 4By 2600 BCE letters became fully cuneiform in Sumerian; Akkadian replaced Sumerian around 2400 BCE and cuneiform writing in Akkadian continued until the first century CE — over 2,000 years.
- 5City life required division of labour, organised trade, and written records; southern Mesopotamia traded abundant textiles and agricultural produce for wood, copper, tin, silver, gold, and stone from Turkey and Iran.
