DIY Notebooks: Wax Tablets Everywhere
Roman schoolkids scratched their homework on notebooks made of wood and beeswax. Drop your stylus, start over.

Unknown — "Lar" (1–25 CE), CC0
Roman Homework Was Reusable
Forget stacks of papyrus. Roman students and merchants jotted daily notes on wooden tablets coated with wax. Make a mistake? Just warm it and smooth the surface.
Found in the Mud, Preserved in Time
Excavations at Vindolanda, near Hadrian’s Wall, uncover hundreds of these tablets. Some still bear personal messages: military orders, shopping lists, even a birthday party invitation—sent nearly 2,000 years ago.
The ancient world wasn’t drowning in scrolls—kids, shopkeepers, even lovers used reusable wax tablets. You’d write with a metal stylus, then smooth the wax to erase. Archaeologists at Vindolanda, a Roman fort in Britain, have dug up stacks of these—some with still-legible notes, including party invites and military supply lists.