The earliest surviving exemplar of a boxwood writing tablet with an ivory hinge was among the finds recovered from the 14th-century BC
Uluburun Shipwreck near
Kaş in modern
Turkey in 1986. This find further confirmed that the reference to writing tablets in Homer was far from anachronistic. An archaeological discovery in 1979 in Durrës, Albania found two wax tablets made of ivory in a grave believed to belong to a money lender from the 2nd century AD. The Greeks probably started using the folding pair of wax tablets, along with the leather scroll in the mid-8th century BC.
Liddell & Scott, 1925 edition gives the
etymology of the word for the writing-tablet,
deltos (δέλτος), from the letter
delta (Δ) based on ancient Greek and Roman authors and scripts, due to the shape of tablets to account for it. An alternative theory holds that it has retained its
Semitic designation,
daltu, which originally signified "door" but was being used for writing tablets in
Ugarit in the 13th century BC. In
Hebrew the term evolved into
daleth. In the first millennium BC writing tablets were in use in Mesopotamia as well as Syria and Southern Levant. A carved stone panel dating to between 640–615 BC that was excavated from the South-West Palace of the
Assyrian ruler
Sennacherib, at
Nineveh in Iraq (British Museum, ME 124955) depicts two figures, one clearly clasping a scroll and the other bearing what is thought to be an open diptych. Berthe van Regemorter identified a similar figure in the Neo-Hittite
Stela of Tarhunpiyas (Musée du Louvre, AO 1922.), dating to the late 8th century BC, who is seen holding what may be a form of tablature with a unique button closure. Writing tablets of ivory were found in the ruins of
Sargon's palace in
Nimrud. Margaret Howard surmised that these tablets might have once been connected together using an ingenious hinging system with cut pieces of leather resembling the letter “H” inserted into slots along the edges to form a
concertina structure. ==Use in medieval to modern times==