The Invention of Writing: Humanity’s Leap into Immortality
Close your eyes and imagine the sun-baked streets of Uruk, a thriving Mesopotamian city around 3100 BCE. Merchants shout over sacks of grain, priests murmur prayers to forgotten gods, and in a quiet corner, someone presses a reed into soft clay, carving wedge-shaped marks that will outlive empires. This is the invention of writing, the moment humanity learned to freeze words, dreams, and deals in time. It wasn’t just a tool—it was a revolution that birthed history, sparked civilizations, and gave us the power to speak across millennia. (Cuneiform, one of the oldest forms of writing known). From: World history encyclopedia A Spark in the Cradle of Civilization In the fertile crescent of Mesopotamia, the Sumerians faced a problem: their cities were booming, with trade, taxes, and temples demanding records that memory couldn’t hold. Around 3400–3100 BCE, in the city of Uruk, they found a solution. Using a sharpened reed stylus, they scratched symbols into wet clay tablets...