The Riddle of the Labyrinth (51 page)

BOOK: The Riddle of the Labyrinth
13.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

30
Schliemann, too, had his eye on Kephala
: Caroline Moorehead,
Lost and Found: The 9,000 Treasures of Troy—Heinrich Schliemann and the Gold That Got Away
(New York: Viking, 1994), 213ff.

      
“Nor can I pretend to be sorry”
: Sir Arthur Evans, introduction to Emil Ludwig,
Schliemann of Troy: The Story of a Goldseeker
(New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1931), 19, quoted in Horwitz (1981), 87.
“seemed to belong to an advanced system of writing”
: Evans (1909), 17.
“On the hill of Kephala”
: Ibid.
In 1894, after much negotiation
: Myres (1941), 947.
“native Mahometans”
: Evans (1899–1900), 5.
for 235 British pounds
: J. Evans (1943), 319.

31
“striking corroboration”
: Arthur J. Evans, “Further Discoveries of Cretan and Aegean Script: With Libyan and Proto-Egyptian Comparisons,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
17 (1897), 393.
“long before our first records”
: Evans (1897), 393.
the last of the Turkish forces left the island in late 1899
: J. Evans (1943), 326.
“after encountering every kind of obstacle”
: Evans (1909), 17.
for 675 pounds
: J. Evans (1943), 321.
he equipped himself with
: Ibid., 329; MacGillivray (2001), 166–67.
a fleet of iron wheelbarrows
: Evans (1899–1900), 68.
he set about disinfecting and whitewashing
: J. Evans (1943), 329.
with the Union Jack flying
: MacGillivray (2001), 175.
about 6100 B.C
.: Horwitz (1981), 96. The date was ascertained by later archaeologists, using carbon-14 dating.

32
It was rebuilt and partly reoccupied
: Evans (1909), 53.
a building larger than Buckingham Palace
: Horwitz (1981), 232.
spread over six acres
: 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
(London: Macmillan), vol. 1 (1921), v.

      
a small Egyptian statue, carved of diorite
: Evans (1899–1900), 27.
The palace comprised hundreds of rooms
: J. M. Christoforakis,
Knossos Visitor's Guide
, 3rd ed. (Heraklion: n.d.), 27.
the 1900 season, which lasted nine weeks
: Evans (1899–1900), 69.
30 workmen had grown to about 180
: Ibid.

33
Evans employed both Christian and Muslim workers
: Ibid.
In the course of the season, Evans's workers unearthed
: See, e.g., Myres (1901), 5; Evans (1899–1900), passim.
So delighted was Sir John
: J. Evans (1941), 333.
“almost thrown into the shade”
: Myres (1901), 6.
“a discovery which carries back”
: Ibid.
“a kind of baked clay bar”
: Quoted in J. Evans (1943), 330–31.
A similar account appears in Evans (1899–1900), 18.

34
“the dramatic fulfillment”
: Evans (1909), vi.
On April 5
: Evans (1899–1900), 18.
small bronze hinges
: Ibid., 29.
“just struck the largest deposit yet”
: Quoted in J. Evans (1943), 334.
between two and seven inches long
: Arthur J. Evans, “Writing in Prehistoric Greece,”
Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland
30 (1900), 92.
sometimes fashioned around armatures of straw
: Chadwick (1976), 18.
One very large rectangular tablet
: Evans (1909), 48.

36
in use from about 2000 to 1650 B.C
.: John Chadwick,
The Decipherment of Linear B
, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1967), 12.
Evans came across only a single cache
: Evans (1899–1900), 59.
“a new system of linear writing”
: Evans (1900), 91.
“style of writing fundamentally different”
: Ibid., 92.
used from about 1750 to 1450 B.C
.: Chadwick (1976), 13.

37
“Evidently the tablets were supplied”
: Sir Arthur Evans,
The Palace of Minos
, vol. 4 (1935), 695.

38
more than two thousand would be found there
: Chadwick (1976), 15.
“the work of practised scribes”
: AE letter to Sir John Evans, April 15, 1900. Quoted in J. Evans (1943), 333.
fingerprints and even occasional doodles
: Chadwick (1976), 20, 25.

39
“We have here locked up for us”
: Myres (1901), 6.
“The problems attaching to the decipherment”
: Ibid.

CHAPTER TWO: THE VANISHED KEY

42
By some estimates, only about 15 percent
: Harald Haarman,
Universalgeschichte der Schrift
(Frankfurt: Campus Verlag, 1990), 18ff.

44
“Decipherments are by far the most glamorous”
: Maurice Pope,
The Story of Archaeological Decipherment: From Egyptian Hieroglyphs to Linear B
(New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1975), 9.
Diagrammed, they make a tidy four-cell table
: The table is after E. J. W. Barber,
Archaeological Decipherment: A Handbook
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974), 13. This typology of decipherment was first put forth by Johannes Friedrich in, e.g.,
Extinct Languages
(New York: Philosophical Library, 1957), translated by Frank Gaynor.

45
a Polynesian language still spoken on the island
: www.ethnologue.com.

46
Weighing three-quarters of a ton
: Simon Singh,
The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography
(New York: Anchor Books, 2000), 205–6.

47
“the benefits that the Pharaoh Ptolemy had bestowed”
: Singh (2000), 207.

      
the demotic script had been introduced
: Andrew Robinson,
The Story of Writing
(London: Thames & Hudson, 1995), 16.

48
Born in 1773
: Singh (2000), 207.
“Young was able to read fluently”
: Ibid., 207–8.

49
“it would enable
[
him
]
to discover”
: Ibid., 209.
the arrangement of the symbols in a cartouche was rarely fixed
: Ibid., 210.

50
“Although he did not know it at the time”
: Ibid.
Here are the actual sound-values
: The chart is adapted from Ibid., 209.

51
“Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Ethiopic”
: Ibid., 213.
“that he used it to record entries in his journal”
: Ibid., 215.

52
then the cartouche so far would read
: After Ibid.
stood for the consonant cluster “ms”
: Robinson (1995), 33.

53
As Ventris's biographer Andrew Robinson points out
: Ibid., 101.

56
Rongorongo contains hundreds of logograms
: Andrew Robinson, personal communication.
Arthur Conan Doyle's “Dancing Men” cipher
: Robinson (2002) also invokes this cipher in a discussion of archaeological decipherment.

58
the Rotokas alphabet of the Solomon Islands
: Robinson (1995), 169; www.omniglot.com.
the thirty-three Cyrillic letters used in Russian
: Coulmas (1996), 109.
the more than seventy characters of the Khmer alphabet
: Robinson (1995), 169.
It will take our alien years of minute comparison
: The three capital
O
's are set, respectively, in the typefaces Edwardian Script, Matisse, and Jokerman. The next three letters are a capital
O
and
Q
, both in French Script, and a capital
C
in Edwardian Script. Andrew Robinson makes a similar point about the challenge of identifying variant letter-forms in
The Man Who Deciphered Linear B: The Story of Michael Ventris
(London: Thames & Hudson, 2002b), 64–65.

59
“The individual signs of Linear B”
: Kahn (1967), 919. This passage is also quoted in Singh (1999), 220–21.
years agonizing over the symbol
: See, e.g., AEK to JFD, May 4, 1942, AEK Papers, PASP; Alice E. Kober, “The ‘Adze' Tablets from Knossos,”
American Journal of Archaeology
48:1 (1944), 65, note 2.

60
There were perhaps seventy scribes at Knossos
: Chadwick (1976), 24.
it was not completed until 1951
: Emmett L. Bennett Jr.,
The Pylos Tablets: A Preliminary Transcription
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1951).

61
The Germans call this style
Schlangenschrift: Thomas G. Palaima, personal communication.

62
“The Adventure of the Dancing Men”
: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, “The Adventure of the Dancing Men,” in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
The Complete Sherlock Holmes
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1960), with a preface by Christopher Morley, vol. 2, 511–26.

64
small vertical tick marks
: This inscription is also reproduced in Robinson (1995), 111.
“documents of ‘lime-bark'”
: Evans (1935), 673; see also Evans (1909), 108ff.

65
“The brown, half-burnt tablets”
: Evans (1935), 673.
Nero was reported to have ordered the documents translated
: Evans (1909), 109.

CHAPTER THREE: LOVE AMONG THE RUINS

67
the precious unbaked records reduced to mud
: See, e.g., Evans (1909), 43.
“In this way fire”
: Evans (1899–1900), 56.

68
In both scripts, text was written from left to right
: Evans (1935), 684.

69
“The conclusion has been drawn”
: Ibid., 711.
filed neatly away by subject
: Ibid., 694.
what appeared to Evans to be census data
: Ibid., 694, 708.

70
Evans was able to work out the numerical system
: Ibid., 691ff.

71
These often appeared next to numbers
: Evans (1921), 46–47.
the “Armoury Deposit”
: Evans (1935), 832.
more than eight thousand arrows inside
: Evans (1909), 44.
depicting the trellises on which grapes were grown
: Chadwick (1976), 124.

72
male and female animals
: Evans (1935), 723, 801.
the elegant answer to this little puzzle
: Chadwick (1967), 45.
logograms denoting vessels
: Evans (1935), 727.
a tablet inscribed with pictures of humble pots like these
: Chadwick (1967), 81ff.
David Kahn described so evocatively
: Kahn (1967), 919.

73
By Evans's initial count
: Evans (1903), 53.
“The number of signs between word boundaries”
: Barber (1974), 94–95.
modern Japanese writing
: Coulmas (1996), 239ff.
Evans himself suspected as much
: In a monograph on the early Cretan scripts (1903, 53), he wrote, “The characters seem to have had a syllabic value.”

74
“No effort will be spared”
: Evans (1899–1900), 59, note 2.
only about two dozen pages
: Evans (1909), 28–54.
a feat he wisely deemed impossible
: Ibid., v.
Although Evans promised additional volumes
: Ibid., x.
the Knossos tablets remained locked away
: Horowitz (1981), 159.

75
Not only did he decline
: Evans did, apparently, share particular tablets with certain trusted individual scholars. See, e.g., A. E. Cowley, “A Note on Minoan Writing,” in S. Casson, ed.,
Essays in Aegean Archaeology: Presented to Sir Arthur Evans in Honour of His 75th Birthday
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1927), 5–7.

      
he would publish reproductions of fewer than two hundred
: Chadwick (1967), 18.
an act that brought down the wrath of Evans
: Ibid.; Evans (1935), 681, note 1.
He remained keeper of the Ashmolean till 1908
: Harden (1983), 14.
serving more or less simultaneously as president
: Ibid., 20.
the local Boy Scout troop
: Horwitz (1981), 167–68.
he took in two wards
: Ibid.
digging on Crete became impossible for the duration
: Ibid., 182.

76
taking an active hand in the negotiations
: Ibid., 192ff.
some two dozen bedrooms
: MacGillivray (2001), 137, gives the number of bedrooms at twenty-two; Horwitz (1981), 130, puts it at twenty-eight.
a sunken Roman bath
: Horwitz (1981), 130.
a mosaic floor set in a labyrinth pattern
: Ibid., 129.
two huge replicas, carved in mahogany
: Ibid.
“Evans' friends variously described Youlbury”
: Ibid.

77
Completed in 1906
: Harden (1983), 19.
The villa's cellar was stocked
: Horwitz (1981), 175.
the financier J. P. Morgan and the novelist Edith Wharton
: Ibid., 204.
“On the hottest days of a Cretan summer”
: Ibid., 5.
“Minos,” as Evans suspected
: Evans (1909), iv–v, note 1.
Queen's Megaron
: MacGillivray (2001), 216ff.
Domestic Quarter
: Horwitz (1981), 140.
a visiting Isadora Duncan danced
: James S. Candy,
A Tapestry of Life: An Autobiography
(Braunton, UK: Merlin Books, 1984), 26. Candy was the tenant farmer's son whom Evans took in as a ward. For the date, see Cathy Gere,
Knossos and the Prophets of Modernism
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009), 94.

78
Evans spent decades clearing rubble
: See, e.g., MacGillivray (2001), 232ff.
newer materials like reinforced concrete
: Gere (2009), 1.
long before early Hellenic peoples
: Chadwick (1976), 4ff.
this one came from Evans himself
: Evans (1909), 1ff.
superior to them in every conceivable way
: Robinson (2002), 10, 33.
In his earliest writings on the Cretan scripts
: See, e.g., Evans (1894), passim.

79
Evans became convinced that the civilization he had unearthed
: Horwitz (1981), 2.
“As excavation went on”
: Myres (1941), 949.
He called his island culture Minoan
: Evans (1921), v.
a 2002 BBC television documentary
: This is
A Very English Genius
, first broadcast on the BBC in 2002.

Other books

One Way or Another by Nikki McWatters
The Delaware Canal by Marie Murphy Duess
The Unwanteds by Lisa McMann
Haunting Ellie by Berg, Patti
Nantucket Five-Spot by Steven Axelrod
Bygones by Kim Vogel Sawyer
Blood Will Tell by Dana Stabenow
Under His Kilt by Melissa Blue