Historic accounting records
From counting to transactions or balances to journals
Recording of accounts has been done for a very long time. The earliest known numerical records, notches on bones are found in the Paleolithic era in Africa and the Levant 30- 40,000 years ago. However it is not clear that they these are records of hunting trips but have some other purpose.
When agriculture became more widespread in the Fertile Crescent (ca. 10,000 years ago), there was the need to document and manage economic transactions to do with farming, livestock, and the division of labour. There are abundant examples of clay tokens found in the middle east from 10,000 BCE in Tell_Abu_Hureyra Syria tokens
Later these tokens were found in hollow clay balls later with a seal marking them. were used to record transactions. This example is on display at the Louvre where I visited it. It is likely that the tokens inside represented amounts of livestock and grain. The whole sealed amount represents a single transaction. For instance you could record the number of sheep given to a shepherd and then make sure the same number were returned, see 26 sheep
Transactions
The essential element in the Bulla is that it is an arrangement between 2 parties and shared between them. There is a reduced level of trust as the object is a little complxt to make and might have required multiple people to witness it. It is not perfect as it can be verified only at the making of it and of the destruction of it, but it provides a verifiable record without tampering of a quantity. You can imagine a shepherd returning the agreed number of sheep at the end of a time in a pasture and agreeing the quantities. Later examples have marked on the outside the contents so that they can be looked at without the destructive reading.
This method of counting clay tokens then developed from a physical counting system using tokens to a more abstract method of using clay stamps or Cuneiform enscriptions on Clay tables.
In the fourth millennium BC, Mesopotamian cities that traded with far way kingdoms needed to keep such records. Clay tablets recovered from the ancient Sumerian city of Uruk show early yet sophisticated tables. Here is a drawing of one of the recovered tablets, which contains an accounting of deliveries of barley and malt from two individuals for the production of beer.
transactions
Drawing of clay tablet from Sumerian city of Uruk Chow 2011, circa 3200-3000 BC. Uruk III Tablet (MSVO 3, 51, Louvre Museum, Paris, France). Annotated with the meanings of the columns, rows, and cells.
Note that the recovered tablet is meant to be read from right to left. Inside each box is an ideogram (a symbol that represented a word or idea) and a numerical value representing a quantity.
Its structure is where things get super interesting:
Rows: there are roughly two rows, each corresponding to an individual.
Columns: the first two columns from the right contain counts of malt
(rightmost column) and barley (second rightmost column).
Subtotals: the third column from the right sums barley and malt within
each individual, and the left-most column displays the grand total.
As a bonus, the table has a footer, since the bottom row contains the name of the official in charge of transactions.
In Mycenae there was a lot of trade in oil that was recorded using Linear B on clay tablets. For instance the following about an oil transaction. The palace had large amphora of oil which were given to artisans to become perfumed oil.
Cuneiform tablet as a transaction
The Cuneiform tablet represents a single transaction from perhaps the temple store to a brewer so that the amount of beer that is/afp/historical-accounting/26sheep/ to be received is known. It highlights a transfer of a physical commodity from one party to another.
It would also help in stock keeping in the temple grain stores. (eg balances of an account).
So these early records using the technology of the time (clay) record transactions and transfers. They form, like double entry computing and computer records, the core of accounting.