An Ancient Egyptian Mathematical Photo Album: JSesh Hieroglyph Program

Author(s): 
Cynthia J. Huffman (Pittsburg State University)

 

Instructors may want to create assignments that involve hieroglyph numerals not available in photographs. Of course, one can draw hieroglyphs by hand as the Egyptian scribes did. However, there is an Egyptian hieroglyph word processor available, called JSesh (Sesh is the Egyptian word for scribe). JSesh can be freely downloaded. The hieroglyphs are organized using a system widely employed by Egyptologists and created by Sir Alan H. Gardiner (1879–1963), who wrote the classic middle Egyptian hieroglyph text Egyptian Grammar. The hieroglyphs are classified into 25 categories, such as: man and his occupations, mammals, birds, temple furniture and sacred emblems, and strokes, along with an unclassified section and three other sections—tall narrow signs, low narrow signs, and broad narrow signs. Unfortunately, there is not a section on numerals. The JSesh hieroglyphs can be copied into other programs such as Word or saved as image files. The table below contains a selection of mathematical hieroglyphs as jpg files that can be copied or saved as images on a hard drive to make it easier for readers to access them for classroom use.

Hieroglyph

Meaning

Gardiner Classification

JSesh image for the number one.

one

Z1

JSesh image for the number ten.

ten

V20

JSesh image for the number one hundred.

hundred

V1

JSesh image for the number one thousand.

thousand

M12

JSesh image for the number ten thousand.

ten thousand

D50

JSesh image for the number one hundred thousand.

hundred thousand

I8

JSesh image for the number one million.

million

C11

JSesh image for the fraction concept.

fraction/part

D21

JSesh image for the fraction two-thirds.

\(\frac{2}{3}\)

D22

JSesh image for the fraction three-fourths.

\(\frac{3}{4}\)

D23

JSesh image for the fraction one-half.

\(\frac{1}{2}\)

Aa16

JSesh image for the fraction one-fourth.

\(\frac{1}{4}\)

Z9

JSesh image for the measurement one cubit.

cubit

D42

JSesh image for the measurement one palm. or Alternative JSesh image for the measurement one palm.

palm

D48 or D48a

JSesh image for the measurement one finger.

finger (measure)

D50