Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script

Hieratic was the most widely used script in ancient Egypt, but is today relatively unknown outside Egyptology. Generally written with ink and a brush, it was the script of choice for most genres of text, in contrast to hieroglyphs which was effectively a monumental script. The surviving papyri, ostr...

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Main Author: Hagen, Fredrik Norland

Format: Book

Language: English

Published: Cambridge University Press 2025

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id oai:library.arce.org:123456789-483
record_format dspace
spelling oai:library.arce.org:123456789-4832025-07-29T07:25:12Z Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script Hagen, Fredrik Norland HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Other languages::Egyptology Histoy of Writing Archaeology Scripts Hieratic Hieratic was the most widely used script in ancient Egypt, but is today relatively unknown outside Egyptology. Generally written with ink and a brush, it was the script of choice for most genres of text, in contrast to hieroglyphs which was effectively a monumental script. The surviving papyri, ostraca and writing boards attest to the central role of hieratic in Egyptian written culture, and suggest that the majority of literate people were first (and not infrequently only) trained in the cursive script. This Element traces the long history of hieratic from its decipherment in the 19th Century back to its origins around 2500 BC, and explores its development over time, the different factors influencing its appearance, and the way it was taught and used. 2025-07-29T07:25:12Z 2025 Book 2753-6378 https://library.arce.org:82/handle/123456789/483 en Cambridge Elements application/pdf Cambridge University Press
institution My University
collection DSpace
language English
topic HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Other languages::Egyptology
Histoy of Writing
Archaeology
Scripts
Hieratic
spellingShingle HUMANITIES and RELIGION::Languages and linguistics::Other languages::Egyptology
Histoy of Writing
Archaeology
Scripts
Hieratic
Hagen, Fredrik Norland
Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script
description Hieratic was the most widely used script in ancient Egypt, but is today relatively unknown outside Egyptology. Generally written with ink and a brush, it was the script of choice for most genres of text, in contrast to hieroglyphs which was effectively a monumental script. The surviving papyri, ostraca and writing boards attest to the central role of hieratic in Egyptian written culture, and suggest that the majority of literate people were first (and not infrequently only) trained in the cursive script. This Element traces the long history of hieratic from its decipherment in the 19th Century back to its origins around 2500 BC, and explores its development over time, the different factors influencing its appearance, and the way it was taught and used.
format Book
author Hagen, Fredrik Norland
author_facet Hagen, Fredrik Norland
author_sort Hagen, Fredrik Norland
title Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script
title_short Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script
title_full Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script
title_fullStr Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script
title_full_unstemmed Hieratic: An Ancient Egyptian Cursive Script
title_sort hieratic: an ancient egyptian cursive script
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2025
url https://library.arce.org:82/handle/123456789/483
_version_ 1843931584220102656