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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsThe Curious History of Punctuation: Author Reveals the Beginnings of the #, ¶, and More
http://www.openculture.com/2013/09/the-history-of-punctuation.htmlAll things we humans use, from our advanced mobile phones to our very arms and legs, reached their current states through a process of evolution. The same, naturally, goes for our punctuation marks. These tools we use to separate, connect, or draw attention to our words and sentences had different forms and uses in bygone times, and Scotland-based medical visualization software programmer Keith Houston has taken it upon himself to trace paths through all of them. In the introduction to his history-of-punctuation blog Shady Characters, he recounts his unlikely source of inspiration in Eric Gills Essay on Typography: my interest was piqued by the unusual character resembling a reversed capital P ¶ which peppered the text at apparently random intervals. This little-discussed mark, called a pilcrow, led Houston to ask the sort of questions that drive his project: How did the pilcrows curious reverse-P form come about? What were the roots of its pithy, half-familiar name? What caused it to fall out of use, and having done just that, why did Eric Gill see fit to place them seemingly at random in his only published work on typography? What, in other words, was the pilcrow all about?
In a recent New Yorker post, Houston works toward the answers by looking back to the pilcrows precursors. Before there was any other punctuation there was the paragraphosfrom the Greek para-, beside, and graphein, write, he explains. A simple horizontal stroke placed in the left margin beside a line of text, the paragraphos was used in ancient Greece to call attention to conceptual changes in an otherwise unbroken block of text: a new topic, perhaps, or a new stanza in a poem. This, over the centuries, became the pilcrow, just as the Latin abbreviation lb, for the Roman term libra pondo, or pound weight, turned into the #, or the hash mark, or better yet the octothorpe. As for ☞, that little hand, Houston tells us its proper name: manicule, taken, naturally enough, from the Latin maniculum, or little hand. With earliest use found in the Domesday Book of 1086, the manicule, a mark that readers drew to call out points of interest, enjoyed great prevalence until the fifteenth-century printing press came along, when, with printed versions of the symboland of other reference marks such as * and now available to writers, authorized notes began to spring up in the margins, encroaching upon the space once available to the reader.
Houstons work on the history of punctuation has now taken the form of a book: Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation, Symbols & Other Typographical Marks. But you can still read a wealth of his scholarship on the pilcrow, octothorpe, the manicule, and other symbols both current and forgotten, on his blog, all clearly organized on its table of contents. Who could turn down that good days reading‽
In a recent New Yorker post, Houston works toward the answers by looking back to the pilcrows precursors. Before there was any other punctuation there was the paragraphosfrom the Greek para-, beside, and graphein, write, he explains. A simple horizontal stroke placed in the left margin beside a line of text, the paragraphos was used in ancient Greece to call attention to conceptual changes in an otherwise unbroken block of text: a new topic, perhaps, or a new stanza in a poem. This, over the centuries, became the pilcrow, just as the Latin abbreviation lb, for the Roman term libra pondo, or pound weight, turned into the #, or the hash mark, or better yet the octothorpe. As for ☞, that little hand, Houston tells us its proper name: manicule, taken, naturally enough, from the Latin maniculum, or little hand. With earliest use found in the Domesday Book of 1086, the manicule, a mark that readers drew to call out points of interest, enjoyed great prevalence until the fifteenth-century printing press came along, when, with printed versions of the symboland of other reference marks such as * and now available to writers, authorized notes began to spring up in the margins, encroaching upon the space once available to the reader.
Houstons work on the history of punctuation has now taken the form of a book: Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation, Symbols & Other Typographical Marks. But you can still read a wealth of his scholarship on the pilcrow, octothorpe, the manicule, and other symbols both current and forgotten, on his blog, all clearly organized on its table of contents. Who could turn down that good days reading‽
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The Curious History of Punctuation: Author Reveals the Beginnings of the #, ¶, and More (Original Post)
Recursion
Sep 2013
OP
hunter
(38,313 posts)1. It evolved into the <P> ... </P> of HTML.
A word processor I often used, long before the "world wide web," automatically marked the beginning of paragraphs with a "¶" symbol and used a left arrow " ← " to close them.
It was trivial to write scripts that turned these old word processing files into HTML or any other modern XML format.
I still stick with simple file formats for my writing, mostly markdown where italics are marked with asterisks, like *this* and paragraphs are marked by hitting the "Enter" key twice.