A Chronology of Major Events in the History of Lexicography

  • The Uruk IVa Wordlists
    3200 BCE

    The Uruk IVa Wordlists

    These approximately 670 clay tablets represent the earliest monolingual Sumerian wordlists and were used for teaching the cuneiform writing system.
  • Period: 3200 BCE to

    A Chronology of Major Events in the History of Lexicography

    This chronology presents a selection of highlights in the world history of the making of lexical dictionaries. Beyond giving a sense of when some of the oldest lexicographical traditions began, it pays particular attention to the western European languages and, within them, to English.
  • Earliest bilingual wordlists of Sumerian and the Semitic language Eblaite
    2400 BCE

    Earliest bilingual wordlists of Sumerian and the Semitic language Eblaite

    These clay tablets from the city's archives represent the earliest known bilingual wordlists, recording Sumerian and Eblaite in cuneiform script.
  • Sumerian–Akkadian lexical tablets
    1700 BCE

    Sumerian–Akkadian lexical tablets

    This Sumerian–Akkadian compilation comprised more than 9,700 entries in cuneiform,taking its name from the first entry meaning 'interest-bearing debt'.
  • The Ramesseum Onomasticon
    1700 BCE

    The Ramesseum Onomasticon

    This thematically ordered Egyptian list of nouns initiated a tradition lasting two millennia,with later versions like the Tebtunis Onomasticon exceptionally including verbs.
  • 300 BCE

    The Nighaṇṭu

    This list of Vedic words is the tradition's earliest extant text,with a commentary (the Nirukta) dating from no later than the third century BC.
  • The first extensive learned collections of glosses of ancient Greek epic and dialect words
    300 BCE

    The first extensive learned collections of glosses of ancient Greek epic and dialect words

    Philitas of Cos and Simias of Rhodes produced these learned collections of dialect words,initiating the Greek lexicographical tradition, though their work survives only in fragments.
  • The Erya
    200 BCE

    The Erya

    Its compilation resulted in a thematically-arranged compendium of glosses covering 4,300 characters,which established a long tradition of successors.
  • 100 BCE

    Beginnings of ancient Latin lexicography

    This field traces back to works like the lost Liber glossematorum by Lucius Ateius Philologus.
  • 18

    The Fangyan: A Milestone in Dialectology

    Attributed to Yang Xiong, this work glosses regional Chinese varieties and words from other languages, making it arguably the earliest dialect dictionary in any tradition.
  • De verborum significatu: The Pinnacle of Latin Lexicography
    20

    De verborum significatu: The Pinnacle of Latin Lexicography

    Compiled by Marcus Verrius Flaccus, this work is now known through a second-century abridgement by Festus, which itself survives in fragments and an eighth-century epitome.
  • Early Tamil Lexicography in the Tolkāppiyam
    100

    Early Tamil Lexicography in the Tolkāppiyam

    Approximately 120 words are explained within this metrical grammatical text, which may have been compiled gradually between 200 BC and 200 AD.
  • The Shuowen jiezi: Foundation of Chinese Lexicography
    149

    The Shuowen jiezi: Foundation of Chinese Lexicography

    Xu Shen's work registered 9,353 characters classified by graphic elements,establishing a tradition that extended for centuries, culminating in dictionaries like the 33,179-character Zihui.
  • The Lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria
    500

    The Lexicon of Hesychius of Alexandria

    This alphabetic compilation of obscure words, with approximately 51,100 entries, is the oldest Greek dictionary to survive in near-original form.
  • 500

    The Amarakos‌a: A Landmark in Sanskrit Lexicography

    This thematically arranged metrical dictionary became the most famous early Sanskrit lexicon, inspiring over eighty commentaries, translations into several Asian languages, and a mention by Roget in 1852.
  • The Qieyun: Foundation of Chinese Rhyme Dictionaries
    601

    The Qieyun: Foundation of Chinese Rhyme Dictionaries

    Compiled by Lu Fayan and others, the original work is now known only through later versions like the Jiyun, which registered 53,525 characters.
  • 636

    The Etymologiae: Isidore's Encyclopedic Compendium

    This thematically arranged work intertwines etymological and encyclopedic information, and survives in nearly a thousand manuscript copies.
  • The Épinal-Erfurt Glossary: The Dawn of English Lexicography
    670

    The Épinal-Erfurt Glossary: The Dawn of English Lexicography

    In this work, some Latin headwords are glossed in Latin and others in Old English, making it the oldest surviving document in the history of English lexicography.
  • 700

    The First Irish–Latin Glossaries

    Key early examples include Sanas Cormaic with 1301 entries, O’Mulconry’s Glossary with 874 entries, and Dúil Dromma Cetta with 643 entries.