The earliest known palindromes are in Greek, what the Greeks called "crab inscriptions" (going back or forth in either direction). A Roman word square in Latin that reads as a palindrome dates from around 79 AD : Sator Arepo Tenet Opera Rotas / Rotas Opera Tenet Arepo Sator.
A
Eve
Eve
Top spot
Eve
It depends how religious you are but if you aren't the first person credited to create the first palindrome was Greek Poet Sotades and if you are religious it was credited to Adam from the Adam and eve story.
Pronounce 'palindrome' like: pal (as in friend) + in + drome (rhymes with chrome). Stress the first syllable = PAL-in-drome.
The first cubic number above 100 that is also a palindrome is 729. The cube root of 729 is 9, and when 9 is cubed, it results in 729, which is also a palindrome because it reads the same backwards.
Madam, I'm Adam.
111
Alleged to have been "Madam, I'm Adam", which was also the first palindrome.
"First woman" remains the same when read forwards and backwards, making it a palindrome. It is a phrase or word that reads the same way whether spelled forwards or backwards.