
The oldest known writing system, cuneiform, started as doodles of counting tokens pressed into clay.
Writing likely emerged five centuries before cities, with Mesopotamian clerks recording grain debits on tablets.
Parchment, not papyrus, drove literacy growth in medieval Europe because cheaper skins were easier to preserve.
Sumerians used writing to write magic spells that could only be read aloud correctly, not merely copied.

The oldest known writing system, cuneiform, started as doodles of counting tokens pressed into clay.
Writing likely emerged five centuries before cities, with Mesopotamian clerks recording grain debits on tablets.
Parchment, not papyrus, drove literacy growth in medieval Europe because cheaper skins were easier to preserve.
Sumerians used writing to write magic spells that could only be read aloud correctly, not merely copied.