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museum with a statue of Ramses II in the background.]] Hieroglyphs are a Writing System used by the Ancient Egypt ians, that contained a combination of Logograph ic, Alphabet ic elements, and Ideographic elements. Etymology & Usage The word ''hieroglyph'' comes from the language of Greek ('), the adjective ''hieroglyphic'', as well as related words such as ('), one who writes hieroglyphs, from (''hierós'' meaning "sacred") and γλύφειν (''glýfein'' meaning "to carve" or "to write"). Hieroglyphs themselves, were called (γράμματα) / (grámmata), that is "graven characters" on monuments (such as Stelae , temples and tombs). In the end, by an overlap in meanings, the word ''hieroglyph'' came to be used for the hieroglyphic characters themselves. The Egyptian phrase for hieroglyphs is Note: The word "hieroglyphics" is derived from the fact that the Greeks called hieroglyphs , hieroglyphic letters, but sometimes simply dropped the "letters" part, calling them , "the hieroglyphics" ("letters" understood). While "hieroglyphics" is commonly used, it is technically incorrect. History and evolution Hieroglyphs emerged from the preliterate artistic traditions of Egypt. For example, symbols on at Umm El-Qa'ab in Abydos , which dates from the Second Dynasty {Link without Title} . Hieroglyphs consist of three kinds of glyphs: phonetic glyphs, including single-consonant characters that functioned like an Alphabet ; Logograph s, representing Morpheme s; and determinatives, or ideograms, which narrowed down the Meaning of a logographic or phonetic word. As writing developed and became more widespread among the Egyptian people, simplified glyph forms developed, resulting in the Hieratic (priestly) and Demotic (popular) scripts. These variants were also more suited than hieroglyphs for use on Papyrus . Hieroglyphic writing was not, however, eclipsed, but existed along side the other forms, especially in monumental and other formal writing. The Rosetta Stone contains parallel texts in hieroglyphic and demotic writing. Hieroglyphs continued to be used under Persian rule (intermittent in the 6th and 5th centuries BC), and after Alexander 's conquest of Egypt, during the ensuing Macedonian and Roman periods. It appears that the misleading quality of comments from Greek and Roman writers about hieroglyphs came about, at least in part, as a response to the changed political situation. Some believe that hieroglyphs may have functioned as a way to distinguish 'true Egyptians' from the foreign conquerors. Another reason may be the refusal to tackle a foreign culture on its own terms which characterized Greco-Roman approaches to Egyptian culture generally. Having learned that hieroglyphs were sacred writing, Greco-Roman authors imagined the complex but rational system as an allegorical, even magical, system transmitting secret, mystical knowledge. By the fourth century, few Egyptians were capable of reading hieroglyphs, and the myth of allegorical hieroglyphs was ascendant. Monumental use of hieroglyphs ceased after the closing of all non-Christian temples in AD 391 by the Roman Emperor Theodosius I ; the last known inscription is from a temple far to the south not long after 391. Also in the fourth century appeared the ''Hieroglyphica'' of Horapollo , a spurious explanation of almost 200 glyphs. Authoritative yet largely false, the work was a lasting impediment to the decipherment of Egyptian writing. But whereas earlier scholarship emphasized Greek origin of the document, more recent work has recognized remnants of genuine knowledge, and casts it as an attempt by an Egyptian intellectual to rescue an unrecoverable past. The ''Hieroglyphica'' was a major influence on Renaissance symbolism, particularly the Emblem Book of Andrea Alciato , and including the '' Hypnerotomachia Poliphili '' of Francesco Colonna . in the British Museum]] Various modern scholars attempted to decipher the glyphs over the centuries, notably ) provided the critical information which allowed Champollion to discover the nature of the script by the 1830s: It is a complex system, writing figurative, symbolic, and phonetic all at once, in the same text, the same phrase, I would almost say in the same word This was a major triumph for the young discipline of Egyptology . Hieroglyphs survive today in two forms: Directly, through half a dozen Demotic glyphs added to the Greek alphabet when writing Coptic ; and indirectly, as the inspiration for the Original Alphabet that was ancestral to nearly every other alphabet ever used, including the Roman alphabet. Script See Also: Egyptian language The hieroglyphic script contained 24 uniliterals (symbols that stood for single consonants, much like English letters) which today we associate with the 26 glyphs listed below. (Note that the glyph associated with ''w/u'' also has a Hieratic abbreviation.) However, the script had a much larger number of biliterals and a number of triliterals — glyphs which represented sequences of two or three consonants. Each uniliteral glyph once had a unique reading, but several of these fell together as Old Egyptian developed into Middle Egyptian . For example, the folded-cloth glyph seems to have been originally an /s/ and the door-bolt glyph a /θ/ sound, but these both came to be pronounced as /s/ as the /θ/ sound was lost. A few uniliterals first appear in Middle Egyptian texts. The traditional Transliteration system shown on the left of the chart below is over a century old and is the one most commonly seen in texts. It includes several symbols such as "3" for sounds that were of unknown value at the time. Much progress has been made since, though there is still debate as to the details. For instance, it is now thought the "3" may have been an Alveolar Lateral Approximant ("l") in Old Egyptian that was lost by Middle Egyptian. The consonants transcribed as Voiced ''(d, g, dj)'' may actually have been Ejective or, less likely, Pharyngeal ized like the Arabic Emphatic Consonant s. A good description can be found in Allen (2000). For other systems of transliteration, see Transliteration Of Ancient Egyptian . Note that, like the Arabic and Hebrew scripts today, few vowels were written. Therefore in modern transcriptions an ''e'' is added between consonants to aid in their pronunciation. For example, ''nfr'' "good" is typically written ''nefer.'' This does not reflect Egyptian vowels, which are obscure, but is merely a modern convention. Likewise, the ''3'' and ʾ are commonly transliterated as ''a,'' as in Ra . Uniliteral signs Biliteral signs Triliteral signs Examples The glyphs in this Cartouche are transliterated as: though ''ii'' is considered a single letter and transliterated ''i'' or ''y''. Another way in which hieroglyphs work is illustrated by the two Egyptian words pronounced ''pr'' (usually vocalised as ''per).'' One word is 'house', and its hieroglyphic representation is straightforward: Here the 'house' hieroglyph works as an Logogram : it represents the word with a single sign. The vertical stroke below the hieroglyph is a common way of indicating that a glyph is working as a logogram. Another word ''pr'' is the verb 'to go out, leave'. When this word is written, the 'house' hieroglyph is used as a phonetic symbol: Here the 'house' glyph stands for the consonants ''pr''. The 'mouth' glyph below it is a ''phonetic complement:'' it is read as ''r,'' reinforcing the phonetic reading of ''pr''. The third hieroglyph is a ''determinative:'' it is an Ideogram for verbs of motion that gives the reader an idea of the meaning of the word. See also ;Hieroglyph articles
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