Do you know why we indent paragraphs? Monks missing deadlines.

Before we had that space at the beginning of each paragraph, we identified new ones with the pilcrow ().

¶ When medieval monks painstakingly inked a manuscript, the scribe would leave an empty space at the beginning of the paragraph for the “rubricator” to later draw the pilcrow and other decorative devices. The monks did things assembly-line style.

Two things happened. The first: these pilcrows and other decorative devices became increasingly elaborate and time-consuming to add. The second: the printing press was invented.

Even before Gutenberg’s machine, monks occasionally would run out of time. But the much faster process, and a continuation of this time-consuming practice, meant that as the sheer volume of printed documents grew, it became impossible to keep up. “The rubricated pilcrow became a ghost,” Keith Houston writes in Shady Characters: The Secret Life of Punctuation & Other Typographical Marks. “It’s brief reign as the de facto paragraph mark was over, usurped by the indented paragraph.”

We indent paragraphs because of missed deadlines and unnecessary complexity. Isn’t that just the most human thing you’ve ever heard?

Dec 10
at
9:12 AM