{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"CreativeWork","@id":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/140f4047-3d6e-5fd4-a1a3-5013464fa866","identifier":"140f4047-3d6e-5fd4-a1a3-5013464fa866","url":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/140f4047-3d6e-5fd4-a1a3-5013464fa866","name":"Writing and Recordkeeping","text":"Writing systems developed in different societies to represent language, quantities, ownership, ritual, administration, and memory. Records can preserve voices across time but reflect who had power, materials, literacy, and reason to record. Archaeology and oral traditions remain essential where written evidence is absent or incomplete.","keywords":["connected-knowledge","general-knowledge-demo","history","public-knowledge","source-backed"],"about":[],"citation":["https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/","https://www.loc.gov/discover/"],"isPartOf":{"@type":"Dataset","name":"Froggit.ai Knowledge Graph","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Froggit.ai","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"dateCreated":"2026-07-11T05:56:14.457000Z","dateModified":"2026-07-11T05:59:57.242000Z","isBasedOn":"https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/","additionalProperty":[{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"trust_level","value":90},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"verification_status","value":"sources_verified"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"provenance_status","value":"valid"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"evidence_level","value":"institutional"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"content_hash","value":"7c1388cb545abbf5ea788ff2393c5ea71fbc5d14a2c50f0992a702c113b2edce"}]}