'Boustrophedon' or 'boustrephedon' (
Greek: βουστροφηδόν: ''"turning like
oxen in
ploughing"'',
German: "Ackerfurchenschrift"), is an ancient way of writing
manuscripts and other
inscriptions in which, rather than going from left to right as in modern
English, or right to left as in
Hebrew and
Arabic, alternate lines must be read in opposite directions. The name is borrowed from the
Greek language. Its
etymology is from βους, "ox" + στρεφειν, "to turn" (cf.
strophe), because the hand of the writer goes back and forth like an ox drawing a plow across a field and turning at the end of each row to return in the opposite direction.
Many ancient scripts, such as
Safaitic, were frequently or typically written boustrophedon, but in Greek it is found most commonly on pre-historic and archaic inscriptions, becoming less and less popular throughout the
Hellenic period.
The wooden boards and other incised artifacts of
Rapa Nui also bear a boustrophedonic script called
Rongorongo, which remains undeciphered. In Rongorongo the text in alternate lines was rotated 180 degrees rather than mirrored; this is termed ''reverse boustrophedon.''
By
analogy, the term may be used in other areas to describe this kind of alternation of motion or writing. For example, it is occasionally used to describe the print head motion of certain
dot matrix computer printers. In that case, while the print head moves in opposite directions on alternate lines, the printed text is not in boustrophedon format. See also the corresponding entry
[1] in the
Jargon File of
hacker slang.
A modern example of boustrophedonics is the numbering scheme of sections within
survey townships in the
United States and
Canada. In both countries, survey townships are divided into a 6-by-6 grid of 36 sections. In the US
Public Land Survey System, Section 1 of a township is in the northeast corner, and the numbering proceeds boustrophedonically until Section 36 is reached in the southeast corner. Canada's
Dominion Land Survey also uses boustrophedonic numbering, but starts at the southeast corner.
The term is used by postmen in the
United Kingdom to describe street numbering which proceeds serially in one direction then turns back in the other. This is in contrast to the more common method of odd and even numbers on opposite sides of the street.
Another example is the
boustrophedon transform, known in
mathematics.

Boustrophedon.png
See also
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Mirror writing
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Sator square - one interpretation reads it boustrophedon
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Stoichedon
External links
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A Boustrophedon text reader
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Another one: produces a complete webpage from your input (Note: does not support Mozilla.)