Evolution of Writing: Could the Material Choice and Phenomenology of Handwriting Shape South and Southeast Asian Scripts? - Malgorzata Grzelec, Laura Gallardo, Elisa Barney Smith - University of Hamburg
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01.06.2026
Cluster of Excellence ‘Understanding Written Artefacts’ (UWA)
Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC)
Evolution of Writing: Could the Material Choice and Phenomenology of Handwriting Shape South and Southeast Asian Scripts?
The graphical forms of handwriting are thought to develop under the influence of multiple factors, including the tools and materials used in their production. Certain Southeast Asian writing systems are believed to have evolved into more ‘rounded’ forms as a result of being incised on palm leaves, which were historically used in the region as a writing substrate. It is commonly argued that the morphology of the leaf surface facilitates inscribing of curved rather than straight lines, and that rounded incisions are less likely to compromise the mechanical integrity of the leaf.
The talk summarizes the current state of the interdisciplinary project aimed at testing these two hypotheses. We started by mathematically characterizing the shape of characters across different writing systems to evaluate whether palm-leaf scripts exhibit higher degrees of curvature. Simultaneously, in order to connect script geometry to the material support, confocal laser microscopy was performed at DESY to characterize the three-dimensional features of the incisions in selected manuscript folios, which revealed the relationship of line orientation and curvature to the depth of incisions. To further comprehend how the material support determines the features of the script, the engineers from DESY developed a mechanical setup to monitor writing forces needed to incise various shapes in the palm leaf substrate. Samples produced with this device will subsequently undergo mechanical testing and measurements at the synchrotron, to understand the impact of incision type on mechanical properties of the material. Results of the investigation are interpreted in cooperation with scholars researching South East Asian manuscript cultures and tied to the historical and geographical distribution of writing systems in the region.
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