A lawyer reviewing municipal account documents in a village next to
the Strazov Mountains of Slovakia, signed his go-ahead by drawing a
small circle with two dots and a line - an image recognised today as a
smiley-face emoji.
A lawyer reviewing municipal account documents in a village next to the Strazov Mountains of Slovakia, signed his go-ahead by drawing a small circle with two dots and a line - an image recognised today as a smiley-face emoji.
The discovery makes it the world's oldest known emoji.
Previously, the oldest known smiley face was in a 1648 poem, "To Fortune" by Robert Herrick, from England in 1648. The new find beats that by 13 years.
Though the drawing could also be interpreted as a straight-face expression, the picture follows a passage that states the lawyer had no problems with the accounts, Brindza was quoted as saying by the New York Post.
Archivists also discovered within the documents a drawing of pointing clowns hand, but they are not sure of its context.