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Paleographic

Paleography is the study of ancient and historical handwriting, focusing on decipherment, dating, and interpretation of manuscripts and inscriptions, as well as the material aspects of their production. The discipline seeks to identify scripts, scribal practices, and regional variations to understand when and where a document was created.

The term derives from Greek palaion, meaning old, and graphia, meaning writing. Paleography intersects with related

Practices in paleography include analyzing letter forms, ligatures, notational devices, and writing materials such as parchment,

The field covers a wide range of scripts across cultures, from ancient and medieval Latin and Greek

fields
such
as
philology,
which
studies
language
and
meaning,
and
codicology,
which
examines
the
physical
book
as
an
object.
While
textual
criticism
works
to
reconstruct
an
authorial
text,
paleography
provides
the
evidence
about
how
and
when
that
text
was
produced
and
transmitted.
papyrus,
or
paper.
By
comparing
script
styles
to
known
historical
hands,
paleographers
estimate
dates
and
geographic
origins,
identify
scribal
hands,
and
locate
marginalia
or
annotations
that
illuminate
later
receptions
of
a
manuscript.
Knowledge
of
material
culture,
including
ink
composition
and
binding,
also
informs
dating
and
provenance.
to
Arabic,
Hebrew,
Cyrillic,
and
East
Asian
traditions.
In
modern
scholarship,
imaging
techniques,
digital
databases,
and
computer-assisted
analysis
are
increasingly
used
to
enhance
reading,
dating,
and
cataloging
of
manuscripts,
expanding
access
and
accuracy
in
paleographic
work.