Volume 31 / Number 1

1989

Special Edition: Writing Systems

On The Cover: End page of a Koran from Hamadan, Iran, dated to AD 1164. The inscription, written in Naskh script, gives the date and the name of the calligrapher. Collection Object Number: NEP27

Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: John Monaghan

The Feathered Serpent in Oaxaca: An Approach to the Study of the Mixteca Codices

The Mixteca region of the Mexican states of Oaxaca, Puebla, and Guerrero is the home of one of the largest […]

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Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: Ward H. Goodenough

The Trukese-English Dictionary: Recording a Language on the Computer

The creation of a dictionary often strikes people as an extraordinary undertaking, although it is more of a common­place at […]

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Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: Simon Holdaway and Susan A. Johnston

Upper Paleolithic Notation Systems in Prehistoric Europe

The search for an indigenous writing system among the prehistoric cultures of Tem­perate Europe has a long history which may […]

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Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: Ezat O. Negahban

Persian Calligraphy: The Development of an Art Form

Iran is one of many cultures in which the written word has been transformed into an art form, an extension […]

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Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: Lynn E. Roller

The Art of Writing at Gordion

The impetus to record a previously unwritten language must be powerful, since it requires adaptation to a new kind of […]

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Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: Cheng-mei Chang

Chinese Writing: A System of Characters Rich in Structural Diversity

Chinese writing is a system primarily intelligible to the eyes rather than to the ears. Each written character can be […]

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Vol. 31 / No. 1

By: John Winter

Chinese Ink

Leaving aside such cases as inscriptions incised in stone or cast in bronze, almost all traditional writing in China, as […]

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