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![]() | The surviving inscriptions of the Archaic period are found inscribed or painted on clay; carved in stone; or scratched on metal. These materials represent what could resist time, and it is self-evident that other, perishable materials - such as wood, hide, wax, or papyrus - were in wider use. The most popular method of writing must have been wooden tablets coated with wax, on which letters were written with the stylus and could easily be rubbed out and rewritten. Leukomata - wooden tablets with a coating of plaster - could be written on with the help of a colouring substance. Tying together two or more of such tablets enabled one to create, respectively, a diptych or polyptych, able to protect the writing and allow a confidential document to be sealed and secured. |
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Note: Click on a picture for a brief description. |