How Books Changed Form: From Calamus To E-Books

An exploration into the evolution in the ways in which humans have disseminated the written word

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An exploration into the evolution in the ways in which humans have disseminated the written word

To understand the evolution of books from the ancient to the contemporary, you need to be aware of the simultaneous development of the means of writing and the mediums through which writing has found form through the ages. Here’s a look of how our beloved books, as we know them, came to be.

Clay Tablets

One of the earliest instances of humans recording information can be traced back to the third millenium BC, in the clay tablets of the Mesopotamian civilization. The Mesopotamians used the calamus, a pointed triangular instrument, to inscribe the characters on the clay tablets, which were then baked and dried.

Cuneiform tablets from the 2nd millenium BC (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

The Sumerians—a civilization from circa 4,000 BC that occupied what is now southern Iraq—developed the cuneiform style of writing, characterized by wedge-shaped marks made by an instrument called the stylus. The Sumerians were among the first to devote themselves to perfecting a ‘school of writing’, and scribe schools flourished in the region. In the early days, business transactions and contracts formed the bulk of written content, but later, stories and myths were also inscribed.

Papyrus

The significant discovery of papyrus as a writing medium, was made in the humid plains of Egypt, sometime during the mid-2nd millenium BC. The marrow of the papyrus reed plant was extracted, and then humidified, pressed, dried, glued and cut to form this very thick writing surface. Prayers and sacred texts form a bulk of the content of the old Egyptian scrolls, s...

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