FORC104 CHAPTER 7 8 Writing Materials Instruments
FORC104 CHAPTER 7 8 Writing Materials Instruments
FORC104 CHAPTER 7 8 Writing Materials Instruments
Chapter VII
Fundamentals of Writing Materials
Definition of Terms
A. ANACHRONISM – It refers to something wrong in time and in place.
This means that the forger has trouble matching the paper, ink, or writing
materials to the exact date it was supposed to have been written.
B. PAPER – These are sheets of interlaced fibers – usually cellulose fibers
from plants, but sometimes from cloth rags or other fibrous materials, that
are formed by pulping the fibers and causing to felt, or mat, to form a
solid surface.
C. WATERMARK – Certain papers are marked with a translucent design,
watermarks impressed in them during the course of their manufacture.
D. WRITING MATERIALS – Any material used primarily for writing or
recording such as papers, cardboard, board papers, morocco paper, etc.
Historical Development
A. PAPYRUS – This came into use about 3,500 B.C. – people of Egypt.
Palestine, Syria, and Southern Europe used the pith of the sedge
CYPERUS PAPYRUS to make a writing material known as
PAPYRUS.
B. PARCHMENT – writing made from the skin of animals primarily
sheep, calves, or goats – was probably developed in the Middle East
more or less contemporaneously with papyrus. It came into wide use
only in the 2nd century B.C. in the city of PERGAMUM in ANATOLIA.
C. VELLUM – writing materials from fine skins from young calves or kids
and the term was often used for all kinds of parchment manuscripts, it
became the most important writing material for bookmaking, while
parchment continued for special manuscripts.
D. DEVELOPMENT OF PAPER MANUFACTURING
1. 105 A.D. – the invention of paper is generally by a Chinese court official,
CAI LUN (TSAI LUN). He is the first to succeed in making paper from
vegetable fibers, tree bark (mulberry tree), rags, and old fish nettings.
2. 7th century (751 A.D.) – The art of papermaking was acquired by the
Japanese after being kept secret for 500 years; the Arab city of Samarkand
was attacked by marauding Chinese and some Chinese taken as prisoners
were skilled in papermaking and were forced by the city Governor to build
and operate a paper mill and Samarkand soon become the papermaking
center of the Arab world.
3. 1150 A.D. – Knowledge of papermaking traveled westward, spreading
throughout the Middle East, the Moorish invasion of Spain led to the
invention or erection of the first European paper mill, at JATIVA, province of
VALENCIA.
4. 16th century – Knowledge of the technology spread quickly and paper was
manufactured throughout most of Europe.
5. 1495 – The first paper mill in England was established.
6. 1690 – The first such mill in America.
7. 1798 – The first practical machine was made by the French inventor
Nicholas Louis Robert. The machine reduced the cost of paper it supplants
the hand-molding process in paper manufacture.
8. 1830 – Robert’s machine was improved by the British stationers and
brothers Henry Fourdrinier and Sealy Fourdrinier, who produced the first
of the machines that bear their name.
9. 1840 – The solution to the problem of making paper from cheap raw
materials was achieved by the introduction of the groundwood process of
pulp making and the first of the chemical pulp process approximately ten
years later.
10. CHLORINE – This was introduced in the 19th century for bleaching and
colored linen could already be manufactured for paper.
11. ESPARTO – This is a grass grown in Libya, also in Spain, and North
Africa was first introduced in England in 1861.
12. STRAW – This was used to make paper in 1800.
13. SULPHITE – This is a paper from wood that was not attempted until
1869 and a paper called SULPHITE was first used between 1880 and
1890.
14. OLDEST MANUSCRIPT – A letter dated A.D. 874 has been found in
Egypt and the oldest manuscript in England on cotton paper dated A.D.
1890.
TRACING THE AGE OF PAPER (DOCUMENT)
The age of the document may be estimated from paper. Four cases
was reported by Lucas where the age of the document was established
from the compositor/ composition of the paper. In one of these cases; a
document dated 1213 A.H. (A.D. 1798) was found to be written on paper
composed entirely of chemically prepared wood cellulose. Considering
that this type of paper was not introduced not until about 60 years later,
the document is obviously a fake one.