Cretan hieroglyphs
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Cretan hieroglyphs are a hieroglyphic writing system used in early Bronze Age Crete, during the Minoan era. They predate Linear A by about a century, but the two writing systems continued to be used in parallel for most of their history.Template:Sfnp Template:As of, they are undeciphered.[1]
Corpus
As of 1989, the corpus of Cretan hieroglyphic inscriptions included two parts:
- Seals and sealings, 150 documents with 307 sign-groups, using 832 signs in all.
- Other documents on clay, 120 documents with 274 sign-groups, using 723 signs.Template:Sfnp
More documents, such as those from the Petras deposit, have been published since then. A four sided prism was found in 2011 at Vrysinas in western Crete.Template:Sfnp
These inscriptions were mainly excavated at four locations:
- "Quartier Mu" at Malia (Middle Minoan II period = MM II)
- Malia palace (MM III)
- Knossos (MM II or III)
- the Petras deposit (MM IIB), 12 clay documents, 5 seal impressions, and 6 seals, excavated starting in 1995 and published in 2010.Template:Sfnp
The first corpus of signs was published by Evans in 1909.Template:Sfnp The current corpus (which excludes some of Evan's signs) was published in 1996 as the Corpus Hieroglyphicarum Inscriptionum Cretae (CHIC).Template:Sfnp It consists of:
- clay documents with incised inscriptions (CHIC H: 1–122)
- sealstone impressions (CHIC I: 123–179)
- sealstones (CHIC S: 180–314)
- the Malia altar stone
- the Arkalochori Axe
- seal fragment HM 992, showing a single symbol, identical to Phaistos Disk glyph 21.Template:Sfnp
The relation of the last two items with the script of the main corpus is uncertain; the Malia altar is listed as part of the Hieroglyphic corpus by most researchers.Template:Sfnp
Since the publication of the CHIC in 1996 refinements and changes have been proposed.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The main issue is that a number of symbols found on sealstones, tending to be more image-based, were deemed as purely decorative and not included in the sign list (or are transcribed when read). The concern is that this process may have resulted in actual signs being deprecated.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Some Cretan Hieroglyphic (as well as Linear A) inscriptions were also found on the island of Samothrace in the northeastern Aegean.Template:Sfnp
Some scholars have suggested relations to Anatolian hieroglyphs:
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The overlaps between the Cretan script and other scripts, such as the hieroglyphic scripts of Cyprus and the Hittite lands of Anatolia, may suggest ... that they all evolved from a common ancestor, a now-lost script perhaps originating in Syria.Template:Sfnp
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New exemplars continue to be found. During recent excavation at the Neopalatial area of the Cult Centre of the City of Knossos a seal stone was found in a foundation deposit. The steatite seal had four inscribed faces and the deposit dated to Final Palatial Period into LM III B. The room where the deposit was found had a "religious sceptre" inscribed all over with Linear A.Template:Sfnp
At Zakros three sealings inscribed with Cretan hieroglyphs were found in the same deposit with a Linear A tablet and a Linear A inscribed roundel. The deposit was in a destruction layer dated between layers LM IA and LM IB.[2][3]
Signs
Symbol inventories have been compiled by Template:Harvp, Template:Harvp, and Template:Harvp.
The glyph inventory in CHIC includes 96 syllabograms representing sounds, ten of which double as logograms, representing words or portions of words.
There are also 23 logograms representing four levels of numerals (units, tens, hundreds, thousands), nine signs for numerical fractions, and two types of punctuation.[4]
Many symbols have apparent Linear A counterparts, so that it is tempting to insert Linear B sound values. Moreover, there are multiple parallels (words and phrases) from hieroglyphic inscriptions that occur also in Linear A and/or B in similar contexts (words for "total", toponyms, personal names etc.)Template:Sfnp
It has been suggestedTemplate:Vague that several signs were influenced by Egyptian hieroglyphs.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
Chronology
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The development of hieroglyphs passed three important stages:
- Archanes script (signs look like pictograms, although their number and frequency rather suggest a syllabic script); this script was only described as a distinct stage in development of the Cretan hieroglyphic in the 1980s. Most of these seals contain a repetitive "Archanes formula" of 2–3 signs.Template:Sfnp
- Hieroglyphic A (best represented in archaeological records; similar to Archanes, but images of animals are reduced to heads only)
- Hieroglyphic B (mostly on clay, characters are essentially simplified, may have served as a prototype for Linear A and possibly the Cypro-Minoan script). Only this latter version of the hieroglyphic includes signs that can possibly match ideograms known from Linear A.
The sequence and the geographical spread of Cretan hieroglyphs, Linear A, and Linear B, the five overlapping, but distinct, writing systems of Bronze Age Crete and the Greek mainland can be summarized as follows:Template:Sfnp
| Writing system | Geographical area | Time spanTemplate:Efn |
|---|---|---|
| Cretan Hieroglyphic | Crete (eastward from the Knossos-Phaistos axis) | c. 2100–1700 BCTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp |
| Linear A | Crete (except extreme southwest), Aegean islands (Kea, Kythera, Melos, Thera), and Greek mainland (Laconia) | c. 1800–1450 BCTemplate:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp |
| Linear B | Crete (Knossos), and mainland (Pylos, Mycenae, Thebes, Tiryns, Agios Vasileios – the ancient name of the latter is unknown) | c. 1450–1200 BC |
| Cypro-Minoan | Cyprus | c. 1550–1050 BC |
| Cypriot | Cyprus | c. 11th–4th centuries BC |
Fonts
The Aegean and Cretan Hieroglyphs fonts support Cretan hieroglyphs.[5]
See also
Notes
References
Works cited
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Further reading
- W. C. Brice, Notes on the Cretan Hieroglyphic Script: I. The Corpus. II. The Clay Bar from Malia, H20, Kadmos 29 (1990) 1-10.
- W. C. Brice, Cretan Hieroglyphs & Linear A, Kadmos 29 (1990) 171-2.
- W. C. Brice, Notes on the Cretan Hieroglyphic Script: III. The Inscriptions from Mallia Quarteir Mu. IV. The Clay Bar from Knossos, P116, Kadmos 30 (1991) 93–104.
- W. C. Brice, "Notes on the Cretan Hieroglyphic Script", Kadmos 31, pp. 21–24, 1992
- M. Civitillo, "La scrittura geroglifica minoica sui sigilli. Il messaggio della glittica protopalaziale", Biblioteca di Pasiphae XII, Pisa-Roma 2016. Template:ISBN
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- Silvia Ferrara, "The Making of a Script: Cretan Hieroglyphic and the Quest for Its Origins", Bulletin of ASOR, vol. 386, pp. 1–22, November 2021 Script error: No such module "doi".
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- Ferrara, Silvia, "Icon, index, symbol: Language notation in the Cretan Hieroglyphic script", Representations: Material and Immaterial Modes of Communication in the Bronze Age Aegean, Oxford, pp. 211-240, 2021
- Grumach E., "The Structure of the Cretan Hieroglyphic Script", Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 46, pp. 346-384, 1964
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- G. A. Owens, An Introduction to «Cretan Hieroglyphs»: A Study of «Cretan Hieroglyphic» Inscriptions in English Museums (excluding the Ashmolean Museum Oxford), Cretan Studies VIII (2002), 179–184.
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- I. Schoep, A New Cretan Hieroglyphic Inscription from Malia (MA/V Yb 03), Kadmos 34 (1995), 78–80. Script error: No such module "doi".
- [1]Weingarten, Judith, and Silvia Ferrara, "Cretan Hieroglyphic seals and script: a view from the East", Pasiphae: rivista di filologia e antichità egee: XVI, pp. 111-121, 2022
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External links
Template:List of writing systems Template:Authority control Template:Minoan civilization
- ↑ [2]Civitillo, Matilde, Silvia Ferrara, and Torsten Meissner, Introduction", in The Earliest Script on Crete: Semiotics, Linguistics, Archaeology and Palaeography, Cretan Hieroglyphic, Cambridge University Press, pp. 1-12, 2024
- ↑ D. G. Hogarth, "The Zakro Sealings", JHS 22, pp. 76-93, 1902
- ↑ Perna, Massimo, "The Roundel in Linear A from Zakro Wc 2 (HM 84)", Kadmos 33.1, pp. 29-37, 1994
- ↑ Nosch, Marie-Louise, et al., "The materiality of the Cretan Hieroglyphic Script: textile production-related referents to Hieroglyphic signs on seals and sealings from Middle Bronze Age Crete", The social and cultural contexts of historic writing practices. Contexts of and relations between writing systems 2, pp. 73-100, 2021
- ↑ Unicode Fonts for Ancient Scripts by George Douros