What were the writing instruments of the Chaldeans? And what did they write on?

Answers (1)

Chaldean
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chaldean (or Kaldani or Kaldean) may refer to:
Chaldea ("the Chaldees"), Hellenistic designation for a part of southeast Babylonia between the 9th and 6th centuries BC
Neo-Babylonian Empire
Ancient Mesopotamian religion
Chaldean Oracles, played a role in the start of the Christian church 1st centuries BC and AD.
Historical Babylon, particularly from a later Greek and Jewish perspective

Language
Chaldean Neo-Aramaic, a Neo-Aramaic dialect closely related to Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, originating from Syriac spoken in northern Iraq, and the Syriac Christian communities worldwide.
"Chaldean script", sometimes used (erroneously) to refer to the Syriac alphabet

Religion and Churches
Chaldean Rite, an East Syrian Rite
Chaldean Christians, adherents of the Chaldean Catholic Church
Chaldean Catholic Church, Eastern Rite Catholic Church in full communion with the Catholic Church
Chaldean Syrian Church, title used for the Assyrian Church of the East in India

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaldean

Votes: +0 / -0

Here is a very long book examining written and verbal records as far back as they go, which is a lot more than anybody ever thought. Time periods are vague, and in many cases we don't even know where tribes lived. Written records around the Indus Valley are records of market transactions, pressed or scratched into clay tablets.

The link to the book: saturniancosmology.org/