The race to decode a mysterious language Susan Lupack

In the early 1900s on the island of Crete,

British archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans
uncovered nearly 3,000 tablets

inscribed with strange symbols.

He thought these symbols represented
the language spoken

by Europe’s oldest civilization.

Their meaning would elude scholars
for 50 years.

Evans discovered these tablets
amid the colorful frescoes

and maze-like hallways
of the palace of Knossos.

He called the civilization Minoan—

after the mythical Cretan ruler,
King Minos.

He thought the script, dubbed Linear B,
represented the Minoan language,

and scholars all over the world
came up with their own theories.

Was it the lost language of the Etruscans?

Or perhaps it represented
an early form of Basque?

The mystery intensified because Evans
guarded the tablets closely––

only 200 of the inscriptions
were published during his lifetime––

but he couldn’t decipher the script.

However, he did make
two accurate observations:

the tablets were administrative records,
and the script was a syllabary,

where each symbol represented
both a consonant and a vowel,

mixed with characters
that each represented a whole word.

Evans worked on Linear B for three decades
before a scholar from Brooklyn, New York,

named Alice Kober
set out to solve the mystery.

Kober was a professor
of Classics at Brooklyn College

when few women held such positions.

To help in her quest, she taught herself
many languages––

knowledge she knew she would need
to decipher Linear B.

For the next two decades,
she analyzed the symbols.

Working from the few
available inscriptions,

she recorded how often
each symbol appeared.

Then she recorded how frequently
each symbol appeared next to another.

She stored her findings on scrap paper
in cigarette cartons

because writing supplies were scarce
during the Second World War.

By analyzing these frequencies,

she discovered that Linear B
relied on word endings

to give its sentences grammar.

From this she began to build a chart
of the relations between the signs,

coming closer than anyone before
to deciphering Linear B.

But she died, probably of cancer,
in 1950 at the age of 43.

While Kober was analyzing
the Knossos tablets,

an architect named Michael Ventris
was also working to crack Linear B.

He had become obsessed with Linear B
as a schoolboy after hearing Evans speak.

He even worked on deciphering
the script while serving in World War II.

After the war, Ventris
built on Kober’s grid

using a newly published cache
of Linear B inscriptions

excavated from a different archeological
site called Pylos, on mainland Greece.

His real breakthrough came
when he compared the tablets from Pylos

with those from Knossos

and saw that certain words appeared on
tablets from one site but not the other.

He wondered if those words represented
the names of places

specific to each location.

He knew that over centuries, place names
tend to remain constant,

and decided to compare Linear B

to an ancient syllabary
from the island of Cyprus.

The Cypriot script was used
hundreds of years after Linear B,

but some of the symbols were similar—

he wondered if the sounds
would be similar, too.

When Ventris plugged some of the sounds
of the Cypriot syllabary

into the Linear B inscriptions,

he came up with the word Knossos,

the name of the city where Evans
had discovered his tablets.

In a domino effect,
Ventris unraveled Linear B,

with each word revealing more clearly
that the language of Linear B

was not Minoan, but Greek.

Ventris died in a car crash four years
later, at the age of 34.

But his discovery rewrote
a chapter of history.

Evans had insisted that the Minoans
conquered the mainland Greeks,

and that was why examples of Linear B
were found on the mainland.

But the discovery that Linear B
represented Greek, and not Minoan,

showed that the opposite had happened:

mainland Greeks invaded Crete and adopted
the Minoan script for their own language.

But the story isn’t over yet.

The actual language of the Minoans,

represented by another script
called Linear A,

has yet to be deciphered.

It remains a mystery—
at least for now.

1900 年代初期,

英国考古学家亚瑟·埃文斯爵士在克里特岛上
发现了近 3,000 块

刻有奇怪符号的石碑。

他认为这些符号代表

了欧洲最古老文明所使用的语言。 50 年来,

它们的含义都让学者们难以理解

埃文斯
在克诺索斯宫色彩缤纷的壁画

和迷宫般的走廊
中发现了这些石板。

他将文明称为米诺斯——

以神话中的克里特岛统治者
米诺斯国王的名字命名。

他认为这个名为Linear B的剧本
代表了米诺斯语,

全世界的学者
都提出了自己的理论。

这是伊特鲁里亚人失传的语言吗?

或者它代表
了巴斯克的早期形式?

由于埃文斯
严密地守卫着这些

碑文——
在他的一生中只出版了 200 条铭文——

但他无法破译剧本,谜团愈演愈烈。

然而,他确实做出了
两个准确的观察

:碑文是行政记录
,文字是一个音节

,每个符号
代表一个辅音和一个元音,

混合
着每个代表一个完整单词的字符。


来自纽约布鲁克林的一位

名叫爱丽丝·科伯的学者
着手解开这个谜团之前,埃文斯在线性 B 上工作了 3 年。

当很少有女性担任这样的职位时,科伯是布鲁克林学院的古典文学教授。

为了帮助她的探索,她自学了
许多语言——

她知道她
需要破译线性 B 的知识。

在接下来的二十年里,
她分析了这些符号。

她根据少数
可用的铭文

记录了
每个符号出现的频率。

然后她记录了
每个符号出现在另一个旁边的频率。 由于第二次世界大战期间书写用品稀缺,

她将她的发现存储
在卷烟纸盒中的废纸上

通过分析这些频率,

她发现线性 B
依靠词尾

来赋予句子语法。

从此,她开始构建
符号之间关系的图表,

比以往任何人都更
接近破译线性 B。

但她可能死于 1950 年的癌症,
享年 43 岁。

名叫 Michael Ventris 的建筑师
也在努力破解线性 B。

在听到 Evans 的演讲后,他小时候就痴迷于线性 B。

他甚至
在二战期间致力于破译剧本。

战后,Ventris

使用


希腊大陆另一个名为 Pylos 的考古遗址挖掘的新出版的线性 B 铭文缓存建立在科伯的网格上。

当他将 Pylos 的平板电脑与 Knossos 的平板电脑进行比较时,他真正的突破出现了,他

发现某些词出现在
一个站点的平板电脑上,而另一个站点上却没有。

他想知道这些词是否代表

了每个地点特定的地名。

他知道几个世纪以来,地名
往往保持不变,

并决定将线性 B

与塞浦路斯岛的古代音节进行比较。

塞浦路斯文字是
在线性 B 之后数百年使用的,

但有些符号是相似的——

他想知道声音
是否也会相似。

当文特里斯
将塞浦路斯音节的一些声音

插入线性 B 铭文时,

他想出了克诺索斯这个词,

这是
埃文斯发现他的石板的城市的名称。

在多米诺骨牌效应中,
文特里斯解开了线性 B

,每个单词都更清楚地
表明线性 B 的语言

不是米诺斯语,而是希腊语。

四年后,文特里斯死于一场车祸
,享年 34 岁。

但他的发现改写
了历史的一章。

埃文斯坚持认为米诺斯人
征服了希腊大陆

,这就是为什么
在大陆上发现线性 B 的例子。

但线形 B
代表希腊语而不是米诺斯语的

发现表明,情况正好相反:

希腊大陆人入侵克里特岛并
采用米诺斯语作为他们自己的语言。

但故事还没有结束。

米诺斯人的实际语言,

以另一种
称为线性 A 的文字为代表,

尚未被破译。

它仍然是一个谜——
至少现在是这样。