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14| MANUAL OF ROMAN EVERYDAY WRITING                                                                      VOLUME 2:  WRITING EQUIMENT | 15







            2. Social aspects of literacy and writing








                 ho wrote in the Roman world? The current discussion
           Wsurrounding this question still largely happens in reaction
           to Harris’ seminal book on ancient literacy from 1989. His estimate
           that a maximum of 10% of the population was able to read and write,
           even in the most ‘Romanized’ areas, was largely based on lapidary
           epigraphic and literary evidence and on the lack of infrastructure
           such as an institutionalised school system. Considering the wealth
           of non-lapidary and archaeological evidence for writing, many
           scholars now think that while Harris’ observations about high levels
           of illiteracy remain relevant, his vision downplays the widespread
           nature of literacy in the Roman world. The more recent scholarly
           discussion has moved away from trying to quantify literacy and
           on to exploring different kinds and standards of literacy and their
           place within society (e.g. Woolf 2015).
           The great variety of texts that survive from Roman antiquity
           reflects the different kinds of writing that happened in different
           environments and for different purposes – much as is the case
           today: it ranges from composing literature to copying or writing
           down dictated texts such as letters, writing for record-keeping,
           reporting and accountancy, for labelling goods, for everyday use
           such as shopping lists or jokes (see Volume 1). Researchers agree
           that writing touched almost all aspects of life in the Roman empire
           in one way or another. Even for the illiterate this will often have               Fig. 4: Professional scribae: so-called ‘ara degli scribi’ from Rome
           happened through economic activities (handling coins for example)                  (Italy), early 1st century CE. AE 2014, 109, Terme di Diocleziano,
           and the bulk of writing must in fact have been produced in military,              inv. 475113. By permission of the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività
           administrative and economic contexts.                                                 Culturali e per il Turismo – Museo Nazionale Romano.
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