The word parchment evolved (via the Latin and the French ) from the name of the city of
Pergamon, which was a thriving center of parchment production during the
Hellenistic period. The city so dominated the trade that a legend later arose that said that parchment had been invented in
Pergamon to replace the use of
papyrus, which had become monopolized by the rival city of
Alexandria. This account, originating in the writings of
Pliny the Elder (
Natural History, Book XIII, 69–70), is almost assuredly false because parchment had been in use in
Anatolia and elsewhere long before the rise of Pergamon.
Herodotus mentions writing on skins as common in his time, the 5th century BC; and in his
Histories (v.58) he states that the Ionians of Asia Minor had been accustomed to give the name of
skins () to books; this word was adapted by Hellenized Jews to describe scrolls. Writing on prepared animal skins had a long history in other cultures outside of the Greeks as well.
David Diringer noted that "the first mention of Egyptian documents written on leather goes back to the
Fourth Dynasty (c. 2550–2450 BC), but the earliest of such documents extant are: a fragmentary roll of leather of the
Sixth Dynasty (c. 24th century BC), unrolled by Dr. H. Ibscher, and preserved in the
Cairo Museum; a roll of the
Twelfth Dynasty (c. 1990–1777 BC) now in Berlin; the mathematical text now in the
British Museum (MS. 10250); and a document of the reign of
Ramses II (early thirteenth century BC)." Civilizations such as the
Assyrians and the
Babylonians most commonly impressed their
cuneiform on clay tablets, but they also wrote on parchment from the 6th century BC onward. By the fourth century AD, in cultures that traditionally used papyrus for writing, parchment began to become the new standard for use in manufacturing important books, and most works which wished to be preserved were eventually moved from papyrus to parchment. Following the arrival of
printing in the later fifteenth century AD, the supply of animal skins for parchment could not keep up with the demands of printers. In fact, high-quality paper from this period has survived 500 years or more very well, if kept in reasonable library conditions. ==Modern use==