HOME | ||||||
Close |
||||||
![]() |
||||||
Ventris, Michael George Francis (1922–1956) |
||||||
British linguist, known for
his translation of previously undecipherable scripts and the
theory that Linear B was an archaic form of the Greek language.
Although born in Wheathampstead, Hertfordshire, he grew up in
Switzerland and was therefore able to speak French and German as
well as English. From his Polish mother he acquired Polish and he
was known to have a talent for learning languages, including the
ancient Greek and Latin he studied at school. He had no formal
linguistics training and started out as an architecture student.
As a schoolboy, Ventris attended a
lecture by Sir Arthur Evans on undeciphered Minoan scripts and he
became fascinated by their decipherment and the study of similar
ancient texts. The script in question, called Linear B, was found
on tablets dating from the middle of the 2nd millennium bc that
were discovered by Evans in 1900 in Crete. While Evans ruled out
any possibility that Linear B could have been connected with
Greek, Ventris noticed some possible similarities in the word
endings and, pursuing this clue, he began to outline the structure
of the language, which he believed seemed similar to Greek. He was
able to decipher much of the text and show that it was Mycenaean.
In doing so he upended Evans`s theory that the scripts (and
civilization in Crete at the time they were written) were Minoan.
The Arcado-Cyprian dialect, about which very little is known, is the descendant of a form spoken in Mycenaean times in at least the Peloponnese and some of the southern islands. The deciphering (1952) of the so-called Linear B script (by British linguist Michael Ventris), examples of which were found on tablets during the excavations made in Crete and on the mainland of Greece after 1900, revealed it as an ancestor (1500-1400 bc) of Arcado-Cyprian. These researches indicate that the Greeks were a literate people many hundreds of years before the period of the first Greek poet, Homer (probably the 9th century bc). Most scholars of today accept Ventris`s theory that Linear B was related to the Greek language. Ventris`s life was cut short when he died in a car accident, shortly before a collaboration with John Chadwick, Documents in Mycenaean Greek (1956), was published. ![]() |
||||||
THE PERIOD OF THE OLD PALACES (1900 - 1650 B.C.) |
||||||
|
||||||
Close |