The Riddle of the Labyrinth (50 page)

BOOK: The Riddle of the Labyrinth
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Ventris, Michael. “Deciphering Europe's Earliest Scripts.” Text of BBC Radio talk, first broadcast July 1, 1952. In Ventris (1988), 363–67.

        
. “The Decipherment of the Mycenaean Script.”
Proceedings of the Second International Congress of Classical Studies
. Copenhagen: Ejnar Munksgaard, 1958, 69–81.

        
. “King Nestor's Four-Handled Cups: Greek Inventories in the Minoan Script.”
Archaeology
7:1 (Spring 1954), 15–21.

        
. “A Note on Decipherment Methods.” In Chadwick (1953).

        
.
Work Notes on Minoan Language Research and Other Unedited Papers
. Edited by Anna Sacconi. Rome: Edizioni dell'Ateneo, 1988.

Ventris, Michael, and John Chadwick.
Documents in Mycenaean Greek: Three Hundred Selected Tablets from Knossos, Pylos and Mycenae with Commentary and Vocabulary
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1956.

        
. “Evidence for Greek Dialect in the Mycenaean Archives.”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
, 73 (1953), 84–103.

A Very English Genius
. BBC documentary, originally broadcast 2002.

Wheelock, Frederic M.
Latin: An Introductory Course Based on Ancient Authors
. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 1956.

Wilford, John Noble. “Greek Tablet May Shed Light on Early Bureaucratic Practices.”
New York Times
, April 5, 2011, D3.

NOTES

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use your e-book reader's search tools.

Abbreviations

ABSA
Annual of the British School at Athens
AE
Sir Arthur Evans
AEK
Alice Elizabeth Kober
AJE
Arthur John Evans
CWB
Carl W. Blegen
ELB
Emmett L. Bennett Jr.
HAM
Henry Allen Moe
JC
John Chadwick
JFD
John Franklin Daniel
JLM
John Linton Myres
JS
Johannes Sundwall
LV
Lois Ventris
MV
Michael Ventris
PASP
Program in Aegean Scripts and Prehistory, University of Texas, Austin
WTMF
William T.M. Forbes

INTRODUCTION

xvi
likened to that of Rosalind Franklin
: Andrew Robinson,
Lost Languages: The Enigma of the World's Undeciphered Scripts
(London: Peter N. Nevraumont/BCA, 2002a), 16; Thomas G. Palaima and Susan Trombley, “Archives Revive Interest in Forgotten Life,”
Austin American-Statesman
, Oct. 27, 2003, A9.

      
sitting night after night at her dining table
: Brann (2005), 4, speaks of AEK's doing this.

xvii
“IBM machines”
: AEK postcard to ELB, April 4, 1950, ELB Papers, PASP.
“I don't like the idea of getting paid”
: AEK to JFD, Feb. 18, 1948, AEK Papers, PASP.

xxviii
“In the words of Ventris”
: Robinson (2002a), 91.

      
“a feeling for the fitness of things”
: AEK to HAM, Sept. 8, 1947, AEK Papers, PASP.

xx
“There is no thread”
: Robinson (2002a), 95.

PROLOGUE: BURIED TREASURE

4
On March 23, 1900
: See, e.g., Sir Arthur Evans,
The Palace of Minos: A Comparative Account of the Successive Stages of the Early Cretan Civilization as Illustrated by the Discoveries at Knossos
, vol. 4, part 2 (London: Macmillan, 1935), 668.
thirty local workmen
: Joan Evans,
Time and Chance: The Story of Arthur Evans and His Forebears
(London: Longmans, Green, 1943), 329. The book's author was the younger half sister of AE.
on a knoll bright with anemones and iris
: AE diary entry, March 19, 1894, quoted in J. Evans (1943), 312.
his workmen's spades turned up fragments
: For accounts of the early finds at Knossos, see, e.g., J. Evans (1943), 330ff.; Horwitz (1981), 95ff.; and J. L. Myres, “The Cretan Exploration Fund: An Abstract of the Preliminary Report of the First Season's Excavations,”
Man
1 (1901), 4–7.

5
the historic basis of the enduring myth of the labyrinth
: See, e.g., A. J. Evans, “The Prehistoric Acropolis of Knossos,”
Annual of the British School at Athens (ABSA)
, no. 6, session 1899–1900 (London: Macmillan, [1901]), 33.

      
“such a find,” Evans wrote
: AE letter to Sir John Evans, November 1900, quoted in J. Evans (1943), 335.

      
In his first season alone
: J. Evans (1943), 332–33; Myres (1901), 5.
On March 30
: Evans (1899–1900), 18.
On April 5
: Ibid.

6
more than a thousand tablets
: Myres, “The Cretan Exploration Fund,” 5.

7
a special font, in two different sizes
: Evans (1899–1900), 58, note 2; Horwitz (1981), 131.
“Of all the decipherments of history”
: David Kahn,
The Codebreakers: The Story of Secret Writing
(New York: Macmillan, 1967), 917.

CHAPTER ONE: THE RECORD-KEEPERS

13
the most visible Bronze Age ruins there could be dated
: Horwitz (1981), 63.
the distinguished archaeologist Flinders Petrie
: See, e.g., Joseph Alexander MacGillivray,
Minotaur: Sir Arthur Evans and the Archaeology of the Minoan Myth
(London: Pimlico, 2001), 78ff.

14
Schliemann dug fruitlessly for several years
: Horwitz (1981), 61.
the authenticity of some of his finds
: For a précis of the doubts cast on Schliemann's work, see, e.g., MacGillivray (2001), 57ff.

15
“the later Greeks understandably concluded”
: John Chadwick,
The Mycenaean World
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976), 55.
Digging down into the circle
: MacGillivray (2001), 60ff.

16
“It seemed incredible that
[
such
]
a civilisation”
: Arthur J. Evans, “Pre-Phoenician Writing in Crete, and Its Bearings on the History of the Alphabet,”
Man
3 (1903), 52.
Perhaps the Mycenaeans had written on perishable materials
: See, e.g., Evans (1909), 3.
hints that they had written on sturdier stuff
: A list of Mycenaean objects known as of 1894 to contain writing-like symbols, including seal-stones, pottery, engraved gems, inscribed building blocks, and clay pendants, appears in Evans (1894), 346.

      
unearthed a clay amphora
: Ibid., 273. This and the vase-handle discovery are credited to Tsountas in Evans (1903).
a stone vase whose handle was engraved
: Arthur J. Evans, “Primitive Pictographs and a Prae-Phoenician Script, from Crete and the Peloponnese,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
14 (1894), 273.
the remains of a Bronze Age wall
: MacGillivray (2001), 93.
In the early 1880s
: Ibid., 95.
dismissed as “masons' marks”
: Evans (1894), 281.
had a symbol in common
: Ibid., 282–83.

17
His father, Sir John Evans
: John Evans was knighted in 1892.

      J. Evans (1943), 302.
Evans the Great
: Horwitz (1981), 6.
“helped to lay the foundations”
: Ibid., 9.

18
“a bit of a dunce”
: J. Evans (1943), 93; also quoted in Horwitz (1981), 17.
On New Year's Day 1858
: J. Evans (1943), 93.
Arthur's much younger half sister
: Joan Evans (1893–1977), a noted antiquarian and art historian, was the daughter of John Evans by his third wife, Maria Millington Lathbury, born when her father was about seventy. Joan Evans was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1976.
“John Evans wrote in his wife's diary”
: J. Evans (1943), 94.
John Evans married a cousin
: Ibid., 104.
Arthur won prizes in natural history
: J. L. Myres, “Arthur John Evans, 1951–1941,”
Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society
, 3:10 (Dec. 1941), 941; J. Evans (1943), 145.
graduating with first-class honors in 1874
: D. B. Harden,
Sir Arthur Evans, 1951–1941: A Memoir
(Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 1983), 10.

      
he published his first scholarly article
: Arthur John Evans, “On a Hoard of Coins Found at Oxford, with Some Remarks on the Coinage of the First Three Edwards,”
Numismatic Chronicle
11 (1871), 264–82.
“Little Evans, son of John Evans the Great”
: Horwitz (1981), 6.

19
He traversed the wild countryside
: See, e.g., Ibid., 40.
the first of his two books on the Balkans
: Arthur J. Evans,
Through Bosnia and the Herzegóvina on Foot during the Insurrection, August and September 1875: With an Historical Review of Bosnia, and a Glimpse at the Croats, Slavonians, and the Ancient Republic of Ragusa
(London: Longmans, Green, 1876).
“Mind where you travel!”
: Quoted in J. Evans (1943), 194.
In September 1878, Evans married
: Ibid., 214.
now best remembered for his fiercely held views
: See, e.g., MacGillivray (2001), 52ff.

20
Evans had horrified his father
: J. Evans (1941), 216.
after seven weeks in a local jail
: J. Evans (1943), 258.
In 1884, Evans was appointed keeper
: Harden (1983), 9.
A diminutive man of barely five feet
: Horwitz (1981), 1, puts Evans's height at five foot two; MacGillivray (2001), 34, writes that he “never grew much beyond four feet.”
he nonetheless bristled
: J. Evans (1943), 202.
“I don't choose to be told”
: Evans (1876), 312; also quoted in J. Evans (1943), 202.
“But . . . it is easy to see how valuable”
: Evans (1876), 312; also quoted in J. Evans (1943), 202.
“His short sight”
: J. Evans (1943), 144.

21
“like a jackdaw down a marrow bone”
: Quoted in Horwitz (1981), 22.

22
the five months he and Margaret spent
: Horwitz (1981), 64.
the widely accepted view of Greek history
: This position was advanced by the historian George Grote in his seminal work,
A History of Greece
, published in twelve volumes between 1846 and 1856. For a discussion of Grote's influence, see, e.g., MacGillivray (2001), 57ff.

      
and with it, recorded history
: Of the world's roughly six thousand languages, only a minority have writing systems, and many cultures from antiquity to the present day have relied entirely on oral tradition as a means of transmitting their own histories. However, orally transmitted texts almost inevitably undergo change—often considerable change—over time, through constant retelling. See, e.g., Margalit Fox, “Linguistic Reanalysis and Oral Transmission,”
Poetics: Journal of Empirical Research on Culture, the Media and the Arts
13:3 (1984), 217–38.
“at a comparatively low level of civilization”
: Chadwick (1976), 180.
“is a network of well-organized kingdoms”
: Ibid.
“When Homer describes a letter”
: Ibid., 182.

23
his father and two colleagues had unearthed Stone Age implements
: See, e.g., Horwitz (1981), 7ff.; MacGillivray (2001) 30ff.
“that human beings had lived on this earth”
: MacGillivray (2001), 31.
at a Roman site in Trier
: Horwitz (1981), 28.
“Such a conclusion”
: Arthur J. Evans,
Scripta Minoa: The Written Documents of Minoan Crete with Special Reference to the Archives of Knossos
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1909), 3.

24
“The discoveries of Schliemann”
: Evans (1903), 51.
Evans had bought sixty acres
: Horwitz (1981), 128.
“from the ancient name of the heath below”
: Ibid., 76.
In 1890, Margaret had been diagnosed
: MacGillivray (2001), 82.
In March 1893, Margaret Evans died
: Horwitz (1981), 77.
“For the rest of his life he wrote on black-edged paper”
: Ibid.

25
completed the next year, and Evans moved into it alone
: J. Evans (1943), 306.
red or green jasper, carnelian, or amethyst
: MacGillivray (2001), 74.
“a series of remarkable symbols”
: Evans (1894), 274.
“not a mere copy of Egyptian forms”
: Ibid., 371.
Schliemann's bead gems
: Ibid., 272.

26
“To Crete,” Evans wrote
: Evans (1909), 10.
Crete's earliest known inhabitants
: Evans (1894), 275.
“It was clearly recognized by the Greeks themselves”
: Ibid., 354.
Evans paid his first visit to Crete
: J. Evans (1943), 310.
“In the evening some excitement”
: Quoted in Ibid., 311.

27
“It is impossible to believe”
: Evans (1894), 300.

28
“that the great days of the island”
: Evans (1909), 10.
“a clue to the existence of a system”
: Quoted in Horwitz (1981), 81. Evans made the announcement in November 1893, at a meeting of the Hellenic Society in London. See also Evans (1909), 9ff.
“an elaborate system of writing did exist”
: Evans (1894), 274.
“linear and quasi-alphabetic”
: Ibid.
“a kind of linear shorthand”
: Ibid., 367.
“Of this linear system too”
: Ibid., 363.

29
“One of the great islands of the world”
: Homer,
The Odyssey
, Book 19, lines 172ff., translated by Robert Fitzgerald (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1963), 359.
tou Tseleve he Kephala: MacGillivray (2001), 92.
The reasoning, which Kalokairinos accepted
: Ibid., 93.
In the early 1880s, William James Stillman
: Ibid., 95ff.

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