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Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping
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Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Jan 04, 2016

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Hubert Lamb
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Page 1: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Writing and Accounting

Key Concept 1.3 =Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping

Page 2: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

How was writing and accounting used?

• support for state authority came with the invention of writing

• regarded as a gift from the gods• people without writing viewed it as

something magical• literacy defined elite status – enormous

prestige if you had the ability to read– since writing could be learned, it allowed

for some commoners to join the circle of the literate

Page 3: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

How was writing and accounting used?

• Writing was used as: –Propaganda–Celebrating the deeds of kings – Used commonly in these two from by

the Egyptians and the Maya

Page 4: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Writing in Mesopotamia

• Mesopotamia – – served as an accounting function = who paid

taxes, who owed the temple, payment to workers

– documentation strengthened the bureaucracy.

– Calendars were precise – contained information of when rituals should be performed

• Hammurabi’s law code – sets up divisions between class and gender

Page 5: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Can writing be controlled?

• Writing, like religion, was hard to control – Gave rise to literature and philosophy…– which led to Astronomy and Mathematics– History went from oral traditions being

passed down to being written

Discussion Question:Writing was a major contributor to social and political growth/conflict – rulers always sought to control -why?

Page 6: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Different systems of record keeping:

• 1. Sumer = Cuneifrom – wedge shaped, on clay tablets, represented objects, ideas, sounds. 1st written language, base for Babylonian and Assryian Script

Page 7: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Different systems of record keeping:

• 2. Egypt = Hieroglyphs – signs that represent words and consonants, no vowels or syllables. Every day use

Page 8: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Different systems of record keeping:

• 3. Andes = Quipu – knotted cords = used for business and administrative purposes, numerical data. Widely used in the Inca empire

Page 9: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Different systems of record keeping:

• 4. Indus River Valley – 400 pictographic symbols – led to the Dravidan language currently spoken in southern India

Page 10: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Different systems of record keeping:

• 5. China = oracle bones, pictographs. Inscribed on shells, bones of animals, direct ancestor of contemporary Chinese characters

Page 11: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Different systems of record keeping:

• 6. Olmec = signs that represent sounds and words, system using dots and bards. Used to record names and deeds of rulers and shamans, battle and astronomical data.

Page 12: Writing and Accounting Key Concept 1.3 = Importance of laws, literature, and systems of record keeping.

Evolution of

Cuneiform – from

tokens to symbols