The cuneiform script was first deciphered by the teacher Georg Grotefend (1775-1853), whose work was completed by Henry Rawlinson (1810-1895), working with the Achaemenid Persian inscriptions of Darius I. The first results were published in 1850, and since then Assyriologists and Sumerologists have worked their way backwards, to the earliest Sumerian pictographic signs.

Because of their early pictographic nature, most signs represent more than one ideographic or phonetic value, usually of no more than three letters. Thus, the ka sign, originally a stylised picture of a head and neck, meaning "mouth", also serves for , "to call, name", and inim, "word, speech".

The signs were only formalized over time, taking their final form in the Neo Assyrian period. The first signs are obviously representative, and often allow for curved elements, with individual strokes often freely disappearing or re-appearing according to the individual scribe. Eventually, the script was reduced to combinations of 5 strokes: an horizontal with the angle beginning at the left, a downward sloping, an upward sloping, a "winkelhaken" (basically a wedge opening towards the right and no real linear extension), and a vertical with the angle beginning at the top.

Since the days of Grotefend and Rawlinson, many new phonetic values have been discovered for each sign (the current sign list numbers around 500 individual signs). In publishing a text, a transliteration is included from which it should every time be possible to reconstruct the cuneiform text. Since many signs have a value ka (it is assumed that there were originally slight differences in pronunciation, though these are impossible to reconstruct), every time a sign is discovered to have this value, it is transcribed with the value and a sequential number. The first value is thus transliterated as simply ka, the second (with an acute), the third (with a grave), and the rest numbered with subscripts (thus, e.g., ka4, etc.).

Sign lists are constantly being updated, though it is a slow process. The standard sign lists are Labat's Manuel d'epigraphie akkadienne, which serves as an excellent epigraphic reference though fails in the sign-values, and Borger's Assyrisch-babylonische Zeichenliste. Both are organised according to the neo-Assyrian values.


I'll add an addendum (03-18-01), just because it's 5:00 in the AM and I'm still up working on dear Hammurabi's law codes (I'm around paragraph 65 or so). This stuff can be quite maddening, really...signs blur, and without a transcription, it can take hours to piece together the correct values (is it a ga? a ka? a qa? each would give a different verbal root, and then you realize, hey! they're throwing in Sumerian just for the fun of it!). There's a sort of academic urban legend about an assyriologist who went dotty as a doughnut in his later years, and started translating the bird-tracks on his frosted window sill. It's pretty much what I feel like right now.