Two languages stand at the horizon of everything we can read.
Around 5,200 years ago — independently or nearly so — scribes in Mesopotamia and Egypt
began fixing speech onto physical objects. Everything before them is reconstruction,
inference, and silence.
𒀭𒂗𒆤
Sumerian
Writing from c. 3200 BCE · Uruk, Mesopotamia
Almost certainly the first written language on Earth. It began not with poetry but with
accounting — temple clerks tallying barley and sheep on clay. Within centuries those tallies
grew into literature, law, lament, and the name of a king called Gilgamesh. Sumerian has no
known relatives: the first voice we can hear is also an orphan.
𓂀𓆓𓏏𓊖
Ancient Egyptian
Labels from c. 3250 BCE · Abydos, the Nile Valley
Egypt's earliest inscribed ivory tags may be as old as — or older than — anything from
Mesopotamia; scholars genuinely cannot settle the race. What is beyond dispute is endurance:
from hieroglyphs to Coptic, Egyptian was written for some 4,000 years, the longest documented
life of any language in human history.
And before them — everything
Writing is a late invention, but speech is a defining trait of our species.
The anatomy of the vocal tract, the genetics of language ability, and 100,000-year-old
traces of symbolic behaviour — beads, pigments, engraved shell and ochre — all point to fully
modern language deep in the Stone Age, conceivably as old as Homo sapiens itself.
Whether Neanderthals spoke remains an open question.
That means the timeline you have just descended covers only the last few steps of a
very long staircase. Sumerian and Egyptian are not the beginning of language — only the
beginning of its shadow on clay and stone. Behind them stretch tens of thousands of years
of songs, arguments, jokes, and lullabies that no one can ever recover.
The first word was spoken by someone whose name, tribe, and tongue
are gone beyond all reach. Every language in this archive — and every word you have ever
spoken — is its echo.