Did the Romans have writing desks?

Upvote:4

I think the answer to if Romans used desks or tables for writing depends on what they were writing and what materials they were using. The best evidence I can find of a writing table is this picture (picture source is Scala - there is a bigger image here but it has text on it):

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It shows "Relief depicting an orator dictating to a scribe. From the Temple of Hercules at Ostia Antica" and is 4th century AD. I can't find any evidence that the Romans had writing desks or tables in their houses, and the site Facts and Details says they didn't.

Many of the most common and useful articles of modern furniture were entirely unknown to the Romans. No mirrors hung on their walls. They had no desks or writing tables, no dressers or chiffoniers, no glass-doored cabinets for the display of bric-a-brac, tableware, or books, no mantels, no hat-racks even.

I don't know how authoritative this is, and the bit about no hat-racks is strange - I don't think Romans commonly wore hats so why would they have hat-racks? There's reddit post which says the opposite on desks.

you would have seen a supply of wax tablets and styli in a given Roman office next to a writing desk for the scribe and the usual writing utensils

This looks like guesswork and there are no sources. Also not very conclusive is this next picture.

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There's a table but maybe it's just for stacking tablets. This next picture (Roman census taking) clearly shows the writer just using his knees.

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And this next one shows a scribe standing writing on a wax tablet.

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Romans also wrote on papyrus. According to the article Writing Materials and Books among the ancient Romans, papyrus rolls could be 50 yards long but individual sheets were "from 8 to 14 inches high and from 3 to 12 inches wide" so you wouldn't necessarily need a desk to write on those (a small table like the one in the 1st picture would be enough). The article then goes on to say that by Pliny's time these sheets were pasted together before they were written on so you had a long roll - some kind of flat surface would have made the job of writing much easier with such a long roll but I can't find any surviving evidence to prove this.

It's also possible they used an easel. There is one shown in the 5th century AD Vergilius Romanus.

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Upvote:6

The person who answered this question might want to learn some basic woodworking. The Romans invented the workbench, planes and other tools for woodworking. Not being electric did not make them primitive. In fact, a woodworker will tell you that the 'primitive' style tools and techniques like those used in the Roman era are better for most projects because you have a feel for the wood and how the grain runs which will make or break what you are creating. That is why modern furniture, which ignores this ancient and 'primitive' knowledge falls apart.To make any type of dovetail is simple and quick. The actual answer is need. Most people did not need a writing table, they didn't need a drawer. And also, much of the wooden furniture has not survived. Saving for posterity, while not at all new, is recently widespread. Just like abandoned Roman villas in England were used for animals and salvage yards, so was the furniture. If you were cold and it burned, that old table went on the fire. These 'primative' woodworking techniques were mostly lost during the Middle Ages and popularized again later to be used to make either the fine or sturdy furniture that people had for the past 500 years.

Upvote:7

Not in the way you would think. The Romans did not use furniture unless they were very rich. Even items like the curule chair which magistrates used were very simple with only a small amount of wood. Of course, desks did exist for secretaries to the emperor and people like that, but a modern desk would have been very expensive in Roman times.

Ordinary students would just use a tablet to write.

A professional scribe might use a small table and be seated on the ground or a short stool as follows:

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Lecterns did exist, but would have been used only by the elite.

Things like drawers were extremely rare and would have been unknown to the average person. The reason for this is that the kinds of modern blades and wood working tools we have today, power table saws and so forth, did not exist. Their tools were much more primitive, so to make something that required a lot of joining like a drawer or dovetail would have been fantastically expensive.

Upvote:10

Some writing surfaces existed, more like an easel than a table though.

Example:

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and

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Even as far back as ancient Egypt.

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