The oldest found written example of Hebrew is the Gezer calendar, which dates back to the 10th century BC/BCE. The writing is known as "Archaic Biblical Hebrew," or sometimes just "Paleo-Hebrew. " The script is noted to be very similar to its mother alphabet, Phoenician, but just slightly different enough to be considered the first remnants of a separate language - Hebrew.
You can see it here:
/350px-Gezer_Calendar_Line_Drawing.png The text reads: --quote-- "Two months of harvest Two months of planting Two months are late planting One month of hoeing One month of barley-harvest One month of harvest and festival Two months of grape harvesting One month of summer fruit" Abijah --/quote-- From Omniglot: --quote-- Notable features (of Paleo-Hebrew) • This is a consonant alphabet with no vowel indication. €¢ Written from right to left in horizontal lines. --/quote-- You can read more about how Biblical/Paleo-Hebrew changed over time at this article here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_Hebrew_language.There is the oldest Hebrew alphabet: itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/arch... Older forms of Hebrew mostly differ in the letters.
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