17th Mar 2010

Papyrus, Parchment, Clay Tablets- Jesus' day

  • How was papyrus made? How was parchment made? How was the ink made which was used on papyrus and or parchment? What types of writing tools were used? The average man could not afford papyrus or parchment. What did they use/ what type of writing tools did they use?


  • Hello Ciao~ The earliest writing surfaces were stone, brick, and clay tablets; a chisel was used to carve out inscriptions. These were affordable and available to anyone who knew how to write--but they chipped and broke. Other surfaces were also used throughout Biblical times: ivory and bone, leaves, bark, wood, metal, linen, etc. Most of these things were readily available and not expensive. Parchment (or velum) was made from the skin of cattle, goats, sheep, deer...and sometimes whatever animal happened to be available (like donkeys and dogs). As early as 3000 B.C., it was the favored material. Later, papyrus was preferred, and it wasn't until the fourth century A.D. that parchment became preferred for books. To make parchment, animal skins were wetted, stretched on a frame, and repeatedly scraped with a rounded knife and rubbed smooth with pumice stone. Traditional parchment is not at all like the paper that today we call parchment. Traditional animal-skin parchment is generally believed to have been introduced in Asia Minor circa the 2nd century B.C. as a substitute for papyrus. (At that time, Ptolemaeus of Egypt was purposefully withholding papyrus from foreigners.) For a brief history of parchment and it's making, visit: http://www.cbbag.ca/Vellum.html The Greco-Roman world favored papyrus, however; the Phoenicians used Egyptian papyrus, also. It was easy to obtain, relatively inexpensive, and durable (although it becomes brittle with age). Papyrus was (and is) made from the Cyberus Papyrus plant, which grows along the Nile. To make papyrus, the ancients took off the outer bark, and pounded the plant to remove it's natural water. Then it was immersed in water for several days. The papyrus was then cut to the desired length and overlapped on a piece of cloth, then pressed for several days. For a photograph-aided look at the making of papyrus, visit this site: http://www.egyptianshop.co.uk/shop/pages/pap_make.htm' Here's another account of papyrus making: http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/town/close/gi45/egypt/papyrus.htm Incidentally, our word "paper" stems from the original "papyrus." For writing on parchment and papyrus, a brush-like tool or a metal pen-like tool was used. Bone implements and reeds sharpened at one end were used like pens. The ink was black, usually made of soot mixed with gum of balsam and oil. It was erasable on parchment, if using a damp sponge. For a website on writing in Biblical times, see: http://www.sundayschoolresources.com/writing.htm Keywords Used: Papyrus How Made ://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=Papyrus+how+made Parchment How Made ://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=parchment+how+made&btnG=Google+Search Biblical Writing Tools ://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=Biblical+writing+tools Hope this helps, kriswrite







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