8 Inventions We Owe To The Ancients: 1. Paper
8 Inventions We Owe To The Ancients: 1. Paper
SARAH PRUITT
1. Paper
As early as 3000 B.C., Egyptians had developed a technique for making paper from the pith of
the papyrus plant, a common sight along the bank of the Nile. Long strips were woven together
and weighted down to bind them into a strong, thin sheet. The Egyptians also invented pens
made of cut reeds, which were strong enough to write on the papyrus, and mixed soot or other
organic material with beeswax and vegetable gum to make ink. These ancient papermakers
knew what they were doing: Many of these papyrus sheets inscribed with Egyptian
hieroglyphics remain intact and readable, even after more than 5,000 years.
2. Eye makeup
Ancient Egyptians knew all about the power of a smoky eye. Way back in 4000 B.C., they started
making kohl to line their eyes by mixing soot with galena, a mineral with a metallic bluish, gray
or black hue. In some ancient paintings, Egyptians are depicted wearing green eye makeup, a
shade they achieved by mixing another mineral, malachite, with the galena. Both women and
men wore kohl eye makeup in ancient Egypt. They believed it had healing properties, as well as
the power to protect the wearer from the evil eye.
3. Democratic government
The word “democracy” comes from the Greek term demokratia, literally meaning “rule by the
people.” The word—and the concept—was introduced in 507 B.C. by Cleisthenes, ruler of the
Greek city-state of Athens. This form of popular government consisted of three separate
institutions: the ekklesia, or Assembly, which wrote laws and dictated foreign policy; the boule,
a council of representatives chosen from the different Athenian tribes; and the dikasteria, a
popular court system. In practice, only a small minority of the Athenian population took part in
this early form of democratic government, as participation was limited to male citizens over 18.
Athens’ system of popular rule would last only until around 460 B.C. when an aristocracy began
to emerge under the leadership of the general Pericles. However, the democratic ideals and
processes that originated in ancient Greece have influenced politicians and governments ever
since.
4. The marathon
In 490 B.C., as the story goes, a Greek soldier ran from Marathon to Athens, a distance of just
over 26 miles, to bring news of the Athenian victory over the Persians in the Battle of Marathon.
After delivering his message, the soldier promptly died. Over the centuries, his story became
conflated with that of another, more famous, Greek soldier: Pheidippides. Before the Battle of
Marathon took place, Pheidippides ran from Athens to Sparta to warn other Greeks of the
Persian invasion, reportedly covering some 250 kilometers of uneven terrain in only two days.
Unfortunately, Sparta was in the middle of a religious celebration when he arrived, and the
Spartans were unable to mobilize for war until it was too late; the battle was already over. The
first modern marathon took place at the revived Olympic Games in Athens in 1896 and was won
—fittingly—by a Greek runner, Spyridon Louis.
5. Concrete
The frighteningly durable substance known as opus caementicium, or Roman concrete, first
emerged some 2,100 years ago, and would make possible the architectural frenzy that began
with Augustus, the first Roman emperor, in 27 B.C. The Romans mixed limestone with volcanic
ash to form a mortar, then packed this thick substance together with chunks of brick or
volcanic tuff to form the basic material for roads, bridges, aqueducts, buildings and other
structures—including such enduring behemoths as the Pantheon and the Colosseum. Today’s
scientists have concluded that Roman concrete, though weaker than modern cement, is
astonishingly long lasting, remaining relatively intact even after centuries of exposure to
seawater and other damaging elements.
6. Newspaper
The Acta Diurna (or “daily acts”), which first appeared around 131 B.C., served as a gazette of
political and social happenings in ancient Rome. News of events such as military victories,
gladiatorial bouts and other games, births and deaths and even human-interest stories were
inscribed on metal or stone and posted in areas with heavy foot traffic, such as the Roman
Forum. Later on, during the first consulship of Julius Caesar, the Acta Senatus began chronicling
the activities of the Roman Senate. The Acta Diurna, which continued publication under the
Roman Empire (after 27 B.C.), can be considered the prototype for the modern newspaper.
7. Chocolate
This all-important invention comes from the beans of the cacao tree, which was cultivated more
than 3,000 years ago by the Maya, Aztec and Toltec peoples of ancient Mesoamerica. These
civilizations used the tree’s fruit, the cocoa bean, to prepare a frothy beverage they considered
an energy drink, mood enhancer and aphrodisiac all in one. The Maya worshiped the cacao tree
as sacred, and cocoa beans grew so valuable they were used as currency. In the 16th century,
Spanish conquistadores seeking gold and silver in the New World brought chocolate back to
Europe with them, launching a craze that—let’s be honest—never really ended.
8. Zero
For all its importance, it may surprise you to learn that zero is a relatively recent concept in
human history, though it still has its roots in ancient times. The idea to use a zero-like symbol
as a placeholder—to show the difference between 10 and 100, for example, or to show the
absence in one column of another number (e.g. 2015)—emerged sometime after 300 B.C., when
the ancient Babylonians adapted the Sumerian counting system. Half a world away, in ancient
Mesoamerica, the Maya came up with the idea of zero as a placeholder independently, around
A.D. 350. They used it in their elaborate calendar systems, but like the Babylonians, didn’t really
conceive of zero as a number in itself or use it in equations. The more complete vision of zero
didn’t emerge until the 7th century in India, when the Hindu astronomer Brahmagupta wrote
rules for using zero in mathematical operations and equations, introducing the concept that
zero could be seen as a number of its own.
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