Read The Riddle of the Labyrinth Online
Authors: Margalit Fox
At the
New York Times
, my editors, William McDonald, Jack Kadden, and Peter Keepnews, and my Obit comrades, Dennis Hevesi, Doug Martin, Paul Vitello, and Bruce Weber, make it a joy and a privilege to come to work each day. Baden Copeland of the
Times
's graphics department provided valuable assistance, and the
Times
's graphics artist Jonathan Corum created this book's original maps.
Two remarkable women deserve more credit than I can ever adequately express. The first, my steadfast agent, Katinka Matson, is to be commended for the creativity and diplomacy with which she handled this book from start to finish. And my wonderful editor, Hilary Redmon, who like me has known and loved the Linear B story since girlhood, has been the only conceivable steward for this project from the very beginning to the very end. Hilary's assistant at Ecco, the supremely capable Shanna Milkey, deserves a medal for repeatedly talking me down from the ledge whenever the words “We need this image done over in high resolution” seem destined to send me fleeing there.
Suet Yee Chong, who is responsible for the elegant design of this book, juggled its welter of strange fonts with the skill of a decipherer, as did the production editor, Dale Rohrbaugh. Tom Pitoniak provided the masterful copyediting, and Nancy Wolff prepared the index.
Last but far from least, my deepest thanks go to the writer and critic George Robinson, to whom this book is dedicated, my boon companion these twenty-five years and more.
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.
Page numbers in
italics
refer to illustrations.
Akkadian writing, 106
American Journal of Archaeology
(AJA)
, 114, 120, 134, 149, 154, 163, 170, 212, 213
Arabic language, 46, 60
Archaeology
, 256
Architects' Journal
, 258â59, 260â61
Architectural Association School of Architecture (AA), 212, 213, 214, 218
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 17, 20, 24, 75
Barber, E. J. W.,
Archaeological Decipherment
, 73, 104, 106â7
Barthélemy, Jean-Jacques, 49
BBC Radio, “Deciphering Europe's Earliest Scripts,” 247â49, 262â63
Bennett, Emmett L. Jr., 179â82
and Knossos inscriptions, 180â82, 187, 191
Kober's correspondence with, 160, 174, 178, 180â81, 182, 227
and Linear B signary, 182, 192, 227
and Pylos inscriptions, 179, 180â82, 191, 196, 225, 227
The Pylos Tablets
, 225, 227
and
Scripta Minoa
, 223
and Ventris, 194, 223, 249, 260
Blegen, Carl W., 146â48, 179â81, 192, 252â54
Bliss, Charles K. (Karl Blitz), 98
Blissymbolics, 98â102, 120, 230
Bloomfield, Leonard, 113
boustrophedon writing, 61,
61
Brann, Eva, 91â92, 112
Breuer, Marcel, 206, 210, 212
Bronze Age civilizations:
Aegean,
1
, 7, 14, 23
Cretan, 4, 16, 32, 78
Cypro-Minoan script in, 114
Greek, 21, 23, 38, 54, 78, 251, 270
of Mycenae, 13, 16, 251, 269â70, 271
secrets unlocked, 270â71, 285
writing of, 27, 71
Burton, Sir Richard, 19
Cambodia, 58
Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, 115
Chadwick, John, 15, 22
The Decipherment of Linear B
, xvii, 251
Documents in Mycenaean Greek
(with Ventris), 251, 258, 262
“Evidence for Greek Dialect in Mycenaean Archives” (with Ventris), 251, 255â56
The Mycenaean World
, 277, 281, 283, 284â85
and Ventris, 80, 207, 249â51
Champollion, Jean-François, 81, 166â67
and Coptic language, 51, 53, 101
and Egyptian hieroglyphs, 51â53, 101, 167
Egypt Under the Pharaohs
, 51
and Ramses cartouche, 52,
52
, 232
Cherokee syllabary, 57,
57â58
Chinese language, 106, 122, 123, 197
Chinese writing, 42, 57, 60
Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur, and “Dancing Men,” 56, 62â64, 93â94
Coptic alphabet, 46
Coptic language, 51, 53, 101
Cottrell, Leonard, 217, 220
Cowley, A. E., 98, 234
Cox, Oliver, 217, 218, 221, 260
Cretan writing, 64, 68, 74, 94, 241
Crete:
Bronze Age in, 4, 16, 32, 78
Evans's visits to, 26â27
and Greece, 26, 281
Greek-Turkish hostilities in, 26â27, 30â31
Heraklion Museum in, 151, 162
map,
66
Minos as ruler of, 4â5, 77
numerical system of, 69â70,
70
pictograms, 28, 34,
35
, 98
stones with hieroglyphs, 25â26,
25
, 27â28, 30, 31, 36, 38, 74
towns in, 232
Ventris's travel to, 230â31
writing system adapted by colonizers, 241â46, 248
Cypriot script, 233â35,
234â35
, 238, 242â43
Cypro-Minoan script, 114, 233
Cyrillic letters, 58
Daedalus, 5, 262
Dancing Men cipher, 56,
56
, 62â64,
62
,
63
, 93â94,
93
, 124
Daniel, John Franklin, 131, 151â56
and
AJA
, 114, 149, 154â56
and Cypro-Minoan script, 114, 233
death of, 175, 177, 179, 267
Kober's correspondence with, 115â16, 142, 152, 155, 158, 160â62, 172
and Linear B tablets, 151
and U Penn, 152â55, 160â61, 167â69, 175
decipherment, 43â45, 46â53
character count, 57â58
as collaboration, 193â94, 262
diagnostic tests in, 54â56
direction of writing, 60â62, 97
Kober's achievements in, xviâxvii, xviiiâxix, 263â67
of patterns, 106â8, 120, 125â27, 232, 263
random guesswork in, 120, 125, 160, 214, 223, 229â30, 266
of unknown language and script, 44â45,
44
, 54, 58, 166, 263
Ventris's solution, 241â46, 253â55
Doll, Christian, 77
Duncan, Isadora, 77
Easter Island, 45, 56
Edgerton, Franklin, 161
Egyptian hieroglyphs, 42, 46â53
cartouches in, 49â50,
49
,
50
,
52
, 81
Champollion's decipherment of, 51â53, 101, 167
demotic script in, 47
determinatives in, 53, 81
phonetic characters in, 48, 53
pictograms in, 48, 53
English language:
grid for,
165
and Roman alphabet, 235
Erman, Adolf,
Die Hieroglyphen
, 206â7
Etruscan alphabet, 43, 61
Etruscan language, 45, 103, 159, 225, 240, 241, 244
Evans, Arthur,
11
as archaeologist, 4, 16, 17, 78, 79â80
assumptions made by, 78â82, 125, 147â48, 256
in the Balkans, 18â20
birth and childhood of, 17â18
control held by, 74â75, 96â97, 117, 130, 252
in Crete, 26â27
death of, 82, 96â97
and exhibit of tablets, 203â4, 255
in Greece, 21â23, 25â26
houses of, 76â77,
76
and iconicity, 53â54, 74, 79â82
and Linear A script, 6, 36
and Linear B decipherment, 8, 46, 60, 62, 64, 93, 123, 129, 183, 229, 235, 241, 269, 271, 285
myopia of, 20â21, 285
and Palace of Minos, 4, 5, 32â33, 77â78, 96, 120, 209
professional distractions of, 75
Scripta Minoa
, 74, 94, 117, 225
tablets discovered by, xx, 3, 4, 5â6, 9, 33, 143, 193
Through Bosnia and the Herzegóvina on Foot
, 19, 20
writing sought by, 15â16, 17, 23â24, 25â29, 31, 33â34, 271
Evans, Dame Joan,
Time and Chance
, 18, 20
Evans, Sir John, 17, 33
Evans, Margaret Freeman, 19â20, 24â25
Forbes, William T. M., 158â59, 266â67
Franklin, Rosalind, xvi
Fuller, Jean Overton, 208â9
Gabo, Naum, 206, 210, 214
GarcÃa Ramón, J. L., 271, 276
Georgiev, Vladimir, 196
Graf, Patricia, 191
Greece:
Bronze Age in, 21, 23, 38, 54, 78, 251, 270
Classical Era, 22, 23, 95, 251, 254, 282
and Crete, 26, 281
Dark Age, 22
earliest writing of, 33
mainland (map),
146
Greek:
alphabet, 22, 27, 43, 45, 46, 60â61, 234, 241, 248, 285
dialect in Linear B, 244â45, 248
pre-Hellenic words in, 95â96
spelling rules of, 242â43
“the” in, 250â51
Green, Fritzi Popper, 111
Gropius, Walter, 206
Guggenheim Foundation, 112, 113â14, 116, 141, 143â45, 155, 267
Hagia Triada, Crete, 68
Halbherr, Federico, 68
Hanff, Helene,
84, Charing Cross Road
, 130
Haring, Keith, 56
Hebrew script, 60
Hillary, Edmund, 255
Hiller, Stefan, 282, 284
Hisarlik, Turkey, treasure of Priam, 14
Hittite cuneiform, 114, 252
Hoenigswald, Henry, 169
Homer:
Iliad
and
Odyssey
, 4, 14, 22â23, 28â29, 254, 285
pre-Hellenic words in, 96, 248, 251
Horwitz, Sylvia L., 76
The Find of a Lifetime
, 17, 24
Hrozný, BedÅich, 92, 114, 154, 170, 195, 196, 252
Hungarian language, 235
Iklaina, Linear B script in, 271
India, curvilinear scripts of, 43
Indo-European language family, 244, 245
International Linguistics Olympiad, 98
Iron Age writing system, 233
Japanese writing, 42, 60, 73
Journal of Hellenic Studies
, 255
Jung, Carl, 208â9
Kahn, David,
The Codebreakers
, 7, 59, 72â73
Kalokairinos, Minos, 29
Kempton, Murray, 270
Kent, Roland, 153
Kephala, digging at, 29â32
Khmer alphabet, 58
Klee, Paul,
Pastorale (Rhythms)
,
55
Knossos:
archaeological digs in, 28â29, 78â80
earthquake at, 64â65
fire in, 67â68, 271, 272, 285
Greek ruling class in, 245
Minos as ruler of, 4â5, 77.
See also
Palace of Minos
and Mycenaean world, 256, 269â70
organization of tablets in, 35â36, 65
scribes' doodles, 38,
39
scribes of, 35, 38, 54, 60, 65, 67, 129, 242
tablets discovered at, 4,
6
, 33â39, 75.
See also
Evans, Arthur; Linear B
tablets exhibited, 203
tablets published, 248
tablets stored at Heraklion, 151, 162, 163
Knox-Niven, Lois Elizabeth “Betty,” 214â15
Kober, Alice, 8, 59, 72,
83
, 85â97, 102â12
achievements of, xviâxvii, xviiiâxix, 263â67
archive of papers of, xvii
birth and early years of, 90â92, 106, 115
and “button” character
, 156â58, 224
death of, 191, 199
“Evidence of Inflection in the âChariot' Tablets from Knossos” (1945), 120â21, 135, 149, 279
and gender in language, 183â86,
184
grid of, 163â66,
165
, 224â25,
224
, 262, 263, 264, 267
and Guggenheim fellowship, 112, 113â14, 116, 143â45, 155, 267
health of, 186â87, 190â93, 195â96
“Inflection in Linear Class B” (1947), 134, 135â41, 159, 263
and Knossos scripts, 128, 129â33, 269
Language
article by (1950), 196â97
and Linear B decipherment, 86â88, 93â95, 102â3, 112, 118â21, 125â27, 131, 149, 227, 230, 231â32, 240, 262â67
“The Minoan Scripts: Fact and Theory” (1947), 155â56, 160, 163â67, 214
as public speaker, 85â86, 88, 103
record-keeping system of, 104â6,
105
, 107â8,
109
, 129, 259, 285
and
Scripta Minoa II
, 142, 157, 162, 172â75, 177â78, 181, 186, 187â90, 192, 195, 197â99, 233
as teacher, 91â92, 108â12, 151, 152, 267
traits of, 85â86, 87, 267
travel to Oxford, 133, 141â43, 162, 172â75, 178, 181
labyrinth, 5, 262
language:
acquisition of, 206â7
alphabets, 42â43.
See also
specific alphabets
in bilingual inscription, 47, 166, 263
bridging characters, 136, 139â41, 149, 163â66, 266
built on earlier ones, 95â96
decipherment of, 43â45, 46â53, 54
diagrammed, 44â45,
44
and gender, 183â86, 244, 264â65
grids of, 159, 163â66, 224â25,
226
and iconicity, 50â51, 53â54
inflected, 121â25, 134â35, 149, 164, 230, 264â65