Highlights | Antiquity | 1400s-1700s | 1800s | References
Highlights
- Many pre-requisite "enabling technologies": written language, paper, publishing, ...
- Spoiler alert: most credit Arthur Wynne (1913)
for constructing and popularizing "the first" modern "crossword" puzzle - There were similar precursors through the ages that were not developed or distributed further.
- Later innovators helped the crossword evolve and remain interesting.
- 79: SATOR square [Roman Empire]
- 140: Paper [China]
- 1605: Newspapers [Germany]
- 1862: Our Young Folks: uses term "cross word puzzle" [US]
- 1890: Airoldi's "Per passare il tempo" (4 x 4 word grid) [Italy]
Antiquity
- ??: Writing: independently developed in at least four ancient civilizations:
Mesopotamia (between 3400 and 3100 BC), Egypt (around 3250 BC),
China (1200 BC), and lowland areas of Southern Mexico and Guatemala (by 500 BC) -
1800-1600 BCE: Phaistos Disc clay movable type
- 1150 BCE: 'Crossword Stela' of Paser, a 20th Dynasty Egyptian limestone stele, constructed by Paser,
during the reign of Ramesses VI. Three different hymns to the goddess Mut are to be read
horizontally, vertically and around its perimeter. An early rebus - 1st Millenium BCE: alphabetical acrostic (or abecedarius).
"In the Hebrew version of Psalm 119, each subsection of eight verses is named
after the letters of the Hebrew alphabet, 'Aleph', 'Beth', etc. -- Acrostics prove
that the texts in question were originally composed in writing, rather than having
existed in oral tradition before being put into writing." - 169 BCE: an acrostic poem by Quintus Ennius
the first letters of each line spelled out, 'Quae Q. Ennius fecit' (Q. Ennius wrote this). - ??: Ancient crossword puzzle found on Izmir (Smyrna) agora wall
The puzzle contains top-to-bottom and left-to-right Greek words and looks like an acrostic
with the same words defined running in both directions top to bottom and left to right in five columns.
it was difficult to draw any meaning from the puzzle. "There are meaningless names, too.
Like some researchers say, it may be a reference to the Christian group."
The word found at the center of the puzzle is LOGOS; 10/12/2016 -
< LXXIX (79): Sator Square or 'Rotas', in Pompeii and elsewhere;
Latin 4-way palindrome word square SATOR AREPO TENET OPERA ROTAS
-- read from left or right, or from top or bottom.- = "The sower [farmer], Arepo, guides the wheels [plough] with care."
or "Arepo, the sower, watches over his works." - The ancient palindrome that explains Christopher Nolan's Tenet
A puzzle dug up all over Europe holds the key to Tenet -- and turns it into more than a movie;
Sator: last name of Kenneth Branagh's character;
Arepo: last name of an unseen Spanish art forger;
Tenet: (the movie)
Opera: 1st scene is in an opera house
Rotas: name of security company; Vox; 9/4/2020 - Christian significance
- "The World's Worst Crossword" -- all Roman numerals
- Romans used a chisel -- not ink! ~Steve
- 140: Paper China. display device and strorage medium
- The Long and Complex History of Paper 4/20/2019
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300: Moschion stele -- part crossword, part cryptogram, and part word seek.
In the stele, Moschion, an Egyptian, is honoring Osiris (Egyptian god of the underworld) with this monument,
which contains words and messages that can be read in different directions. One message on the stele is
"Moschion to Osiris, for the treatment which cured his foot." In other words, a thank-you note!
~Penny Dell Puzzles; Proclaiming it to Greeks and Natives, along the rows of the chequerboard
1400s-1700s
- 1440: Printing press w/ metal movable type
Gutenberg in Europe; other types of type and materials earlier in other countries - It's 2039, and Your Beloved Books Are Dead On the 600th anniversary of the Gutenberg press,
we can still celebrate how stories are shared. Op-Eds From the Future; NYT; 12/2/2019 - 1599: Hymns to Astraea by Sir John Davies;
each hymn (verse) spelled out ELISABETHA REGINA (Queen Elizabeth) [on right] - 1605: Newspapers printed, for general public
- 1793–1795: The Stockton Bee: some crossword-like puzzles appear; Stockton-on-Tees, Great Britain
1800s
- "Cipher crosswords were invented in Germany in the 19th century" ~Wikipedia
- 1806: A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language by Noah Webster
- The Definition of a Dictionary Merriam-Webster is revising its most authoritative tome for the digital age.
But in an era of twerking and trolling, what should a dictionary look like? (and do we even need one?); Slate; 1/12/2015 - 1832: This Man’s Tombstone Features a Cryptic Crossword Puzzle—Can You Solve It? John Renie
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1846: A Valentine by Edgar Allen Poe; poem spelled out the name of Frances Sargent Osgood
in the 1st letter of the 1st line, 2nd letter of the 2nd line, etc. - 1850s: acrostics evolved from poems to puzzles. "A flood of British acrostic books were published
which not only praised kings and conquerors but were also intended to educate children in history and geography.
The double acrostic was a fad in the latter part of the 19th century. Queen Victoria was believed to be very fond
of the double acrostic which, by this time, had evolved from a verse-form into a type of puzzle." - 1859: 6 x 6 English word square same ref thru 9 x 9
- 1862: Our Young Folks uses term "cross word puzzle" in US [img: on right]
- 1867: Bean Puzzle Tombstone Henrietta & Susanna Bean; it took over 100 years
to decode this enigmatic epitaph for two buried brides; 12/5/2016 - 1870s: A Boat Beneath a Sunny Sky by Lewis Carroll: poem from Through the Looking Glass;
a "master of acrostics", Carroll was also famous for "word links" (doublet, aka word ladder) - 1873-1876: Diamond and other shape word 'squares'
US magazine, St. Nicholas [on right] page - 1877: 7 x 7 English word square
- 1879: "square words" from Planche's Guess Me [on right]
- 1883: National Puzzlers' League founded; site
- 1884: 8 x 8 English word square
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1890: "Per passare il tempo" ("To pass the time") by Giuseppe Airoldi in Il Secolo Illustrato della Domenica,
Sep. 4, 1890; four-by-four grid with no shaded squares; it included horizontal and vertical clues [on right] - 1897: 9 x 9 English word square
References
- section: History: General References
- Wikipedia: 19th century and earlier
- Paleofuture (predictions): 1870s; 1880s; 1890s
- 19th Century French Artists Predicted the World of the Future in this Series of Postcards 10/15/2012
- 10 Mesopotamia Inventions You Should Know 6/29/2019
- These 7 Islamic Golden Age Inventions Changed The World 6/12/2019
- 8 Ancient Greek Inventions That Forever Changed the World 6/2/2019
- 11 Greek Inventions That Changed the World for Good 5/9/2019
- 11 Fascinating Sumerian Inventions That Changed the World 5/8/2019
- 7 Interesting Inventions of the Islamic Civilization 5/3/2019
- Ancient Egyptian Technology and Inventions 4/23/2019
- Here Are Some of The Most Important Victorian Era Inventions 4/18/2019
- 27 Industrial Revolution Inventions that Changed the World 2/18/2019
- Made In China: Chinese Inventions That Changed the World 2/12/2019
- 18 Inventions of the Middle Ages That Changed The World 11/29/2018
- 9 Incredible Mayan Inventions and Achievements and One They Surprisingly Missed 4/18/2018
- 19 Greatest Inventions of the Roman Empire That Helped Shape the Modern World 3/6/2018