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 5. Catalogue of writing equipment
                          5.1 Utensils for writing:
                          styli, pens and brushes




 hen thinking of writing implements, the first thing that   Stylus (stilus/graphium)
 Wcomes to mind is what we write with and what we write on,   Roman styli were mainly used to write on wax tablets but also for
 e.g. pen and paper. But if we think further there are a number of  other surfaces such as lead and wood. They were mostly made of
 accessories needed, or useful, for writing, for example to help keep  metal, with iron and copper-alloys being the most commonly used
 equal distance between lines (ordination), to carry writing sets in  materials. Early Roman styli are made of bone and they are not
 or to prepare ink with.  usually found after the 1st century CE (Schaltenbrand Obrecht 2012,
 In the following catalogue the Roman equivalents of pen and paper   60–62, 65). Wooden styli are known from late Roman and Coptic
 will be introduced in some detail. These include styli, pens and   Egypt and must have existed in other places as well (Schaltenbrand
 brushes and the main surfaces and materials used for handwriting   Obrecht 2012, 53). There are also objects with a wooden shank and
 such as papyrus and wood. Important accessories that are known   a metal spiral nib frequently called ‘Vindolanda type’ pens, which
 from written and iconographic evidence or that can be found on
 Roman excavation sites are also described. The catalogue ends with
 tools for which the evidence is scarce or ambiguous. These include
 stones used to sharpen styli, pieces of lead used to draw lines to
 write on, stones and sponges used as erasers, small objects used to
 separate the ‘pages’ of bundles of writing tablets, etc. In addition
 to these, and not discussed in the catalogue, there are many other
 tools which can be associated with writing in some contexts but
 that are not specifically writing equipment. These include utensils
 that may have been used to mix ink and paint or to prepare wax,
 such as stirrers, spoons and spoon-probes, certain spatulas, stone
 palettes and small vessels.

 For the relevant terminology in other languages commonly used
 in research publications, please refer to the Glossary.


                    Fig. 16: Typology of Roman iron styli from Britain
                      after Manning 1985, 85, redrawn by A. Willi.
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