Ὅλα Αἰγυπτιακά. Ἐκτὸς ἑνὸς ἐφευρεθέντος τῷ 1830, τοῦ ἐμπνευστοῦ του ἐνθυμηθέντος ἔν... ὄνειρον. Μάϊστα.
εκτός από την παράθεση του συναδέλφου πιο πάνω, πάρτε κι αυτό:
1) Tifanagh or "Lybico-Berber" or "Mande" (c. 3000 BC - present)
Ancient Tifinagh inscription on a rock in Essouk, Mali (c. 200 BC; photo courtesy of Tagelmoust)
Rock paintings at Oued Mertoutek in southern Algeria show the earliest signs if the so-called "Lybico-Berber" or
early Tifinagh writing system and date to 3000 BC. Tifanagh is still used by Amajegh (Tauregs), who mainly inhabit a vast area of West Africa, including present-day Mali, Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso, Southern Algeria and Southern Libya....
2) Vai (3000 BC - present)
Vai engravings on metalwork
Στο υπογραμμισμένο διαψεύδεται και το "όνειρο"...
Vai is one of the world's oldest alphabetic scripts in continuous use, with over 150,000 users in present-day Liberia and Sierra Leone. It's a highly advanced syllabary writing system with over 210 distinct characters representing various consonants and vowel sounds used in the Vai language (a descendant of ancient Mande).
Contrary to popular belief, Vai is not a wholly unique script invented circa 1830 by a West African whose friends helped him remember a dream. Evidence of its antiquity comes from inscriptions from Goundaka, Mali that date to 3000 BC, and Vai's close similarity and relation to the older Proto-Saharan and Tifanagh writing found all over the Saharan region. Vai has also been linked to other writing systems in West Africa that were allegedly invented in the 1800s by people who had similar dreams. Even in the Americas, Vai is similar to scripts that were supposedly invented by Africans who, again, were coincidentally inspired by their dreams (e.g., the so-called Afaka script shares at least 34 of its 56 characters or 61% with those of the Vai script).
3) Meroitic" or Napatan (800 BC - 600 AD)
The so-called "Meroitic" script was developed sometime around 800 BC in
Napata, the new capital of Ethiopia or Kush,
4) Ge'ez or "Ethiopic" (800 BC - present)
The Ge'ez script is an advanced syllabary
script consisting of 231 characters used to communicate in several Ethiopic languages. It is unquestionably one of the oldest writing systems in continuous use anywhere in the world. Although the original Ge'ez language is only used in Ethiopian and Eritrean Tawahedo Orthodox churches and the Beta Israel churches, the Ge'ez script is mainly used by speakers of Amharic, Tigre and Tigrinya, among others...
αυτά...
παραπέρα, βαριέμαι να πείσω έναν αναλφάβητο νεοναζί, για την εμφάνιση του αλφαβήτου...
κάθε προσπάθεια των ανθρώπων όπου γης να δημιουργήσουν πολιτισμό και να ξεκολήσουν από τη λάσπη και την άμμο είναι αξιόλογη από μόνη της...
ας κρατάει ο κύριος μπακάλης και οι λοιποί ναζήδες το υποδεκάμετρο, για να αξιολογήσει και τη σβήστρα για να σβήσει...
ΠΑΝΤΕΛΩΣ ΑΔΙΑΦΟΡΟ ΚΑΙ ΓΕΛΟΙΟ!