The 13 Most Mysterious Unsolved Writing Systems
The history of writing is a long and interesting one. Without living users and comparison examples, an archaeologist that unearths a new script is probably going to spend the rest of their life scratching their head and trying to translate it. Without the equivalent of a Rosetta stone, it's almost impossible to reconstruct a dead writing system. These 13 examples have defied the best efforts of cryptographers, scientists and translators to pick them apart.
The
story of the Quipu system is a bit of a disappointment. While still not
fully explained, they were used by the Inca and their predecessors in
the Andes, and were used as a method of communication not by writing on a
flat surface, but instead by knotting small pieces of thread. As cool
as this would be, it appears that Quipu isn’t really a language, as it
doesn’t seem to contain enough information. Instead, it’s probably a
method of accounting and recording numbers, as the knots appear to
correspond to decimal notation. Researchers think the color of the
thread may imply something too, but aren’t sure what. I kind of wish it
was a full written language communicated by knots. That’d be incredibly
cool.
There’s
a chance the Rohonx Codex is fake, which is a major bummer if true.
It’s a Hungarian book which is at least from the early 1800s and there’s
some scant evidence of it being older than that. Scholars generally
think it’s a hoax from a prominent historian and hoaxer from the 1830s
and 1840s who enjoyed fooling his comrades, but there is the vaguest
hint that it might be older than that. This tome is written in a complex
script that doesn’t appear to be linked to any known language, living
or dead. One scholar created a translation based on turning the book
upside down and saying what he thought the letters look like, but that
doesn’t hold much water. I hope that this is a true ancient unidentified
script, but there’s a pretty good chance it isn’t.
Isthmian
script comes from Mesoamerica, around 500BCE to 500CE, and we have no
idea what it says. It’s obviously a fully developed writing system, and
the analysis of it appears to be that it’s logosyllabic. This system is
from a people post-Olmec, and is based around two sets of characters:
the first are logograms, where each symbol represents and entire word;
the other are used to represent syllables. It’s a linguistic mashup
language. So far only 10 or so artifacts have been found with this
script on them, but it’s obviously a fully formed system. Since there
are so few examples, those who claim to have translated it are able to
get away with a lot more as there isn’t much to compare them too.
The
Singapore Stone is a huge chunk of sandstone found in Singapore,
engraved with an unknown script native to Southeast Asia. It’s probably
from somewhere between the 10th and 13th centuries, and might be Old
Javanese or Sanskrit. Unfortunately, the stone is now mostly destroyed.
Fragments of it survive, but in 1843 the original slab was blown up to
widen a river passageway. Even with 175 years of research into the
stone, we still don’t know what language it is, even though the
linguistic breakdown of that region is otherwise pretty well known.
The
Phaistos Disc is a prime example of Cretian Heiroglyphs from around
2000BC. Linked to Linear A and B (more on that later), this 15cm disk is
engraved on both sides, and is one of only seven known examples of the
script. The Disc ignited popular interest like few others have, and has
been the subject of intense scrutiny as amateurs and professionals alike
have attempted to decipher it, without a clear case of success. There
are some 45 letter/symbols on the disc, and the writing winds in a
spiral on each face. People have called it a history, a board game, a
story, or even a piece of geometry. Yet despite this intense attention,
we still don’t know what it says.
The
Southwest Paleohispanic script has as much debate about its name as its
translation. Apparently some people don’t like calling it Southwestern
as it doesn’t describe anything about it, and apparently this is a thing
that academics argue about. The writing system is found on around a
hundred large stones throughout the Southwest of Spain, from around
700BCE. Very little is agreed about this ancient language, except that
it mostly seems to have been used for funeral stones, and that they
liked writing it in spirals. The type itself appears to be partly a
syllabary, with each symbol representing a syllable, like in Japanese,
but then with a normal alphabet for finishing off the vowels after the
final consonant in the word. Weird, huh? At least with this script there
have been some advances, and many of the letters have agreed upon
sounds, but there are still plenty which don’t.
There’s
only one example of a script believed to be linked to the Olmec Empire,
that that’s the Cascajal Block, dated to the first millennium BCE, and
found in a pile of debris at a building site. The block has 62 glyphs on
it, some of which appear to be local plants of one form or another.
Unfortunately, with such a small corpus, it’s incredibly difficult to
decipher. Even with such a prominent and large empire over hundreds of
years, this is the only sample of writing that has been unearthed. The
symbols are completely unlike any other writing system from that part of
the world, and has no apparent organisation between the lines of text.
Without additional information, there’s a pretty good chance it could be
even a fake.
For
600 years from the 26th century BCE, the Indus Valley Civilization
thrived, with a detailed and complex writing system, which remains
untranslatable due to the lack of anything comparing it to another known
script. Essentially we need another Rosetta Stone. We’ve known of this
script since the 1870s, and scholars think it has a Dravidian origin,
but there’s not a lot of evidence for that. What we know about it comes
from 3700 seals that have been discovered, creating a corpus of 417
signs/letters, most of which are used in seals of around five symbols.
It’s thought to run right-to-left, and be mostly pictoral, but with some
abstract symbols too.
In
the Southeastern area of glorious Kazakhstan way back in 1969, a single
burial mound was discovered, and buried within was a person dressed
like a freaking badass and a silver cup bearing an inscription that has
resisted translation ever since. The only known example of this writing,
it’s thought to be variant of a Scythian dialect, but no one’s quite
sure. The person buried inside looks like a character out of a Zelda
game, with a huge red peaked hat, and more than 4,000 gold ornaments
over their red outfit, including what looks like chainmail. This badass
prince or princess is now a national treasure, but they’re still arguing
about the writing on their pimp cup.
The
Jiahu symbols represent possibly the oldest writing system we’ve ever
encountered. Dating back to 6600BCE, there are only sixteen known
characters, all found in stone age sites China. The symbols have some
visual similarities to the later origins of Chinese scripts, commonly
believed to have developed out of oracle bone carvings. If the Jiahu
symbols are a form of writing, then the divide between them and the
oracle bones is an astonishing one, a full 5,000 years. That’s right,
between the two earliest examples of Chinese writing, there’s five
millenium of difference. We’re closer to Shang oracle bones in
chronology than they were to the Jiahu. It’s the oldest writing system
that we’ve ever found, but with so little evidence, there’s a pretty
good chance it’s not technically writing, but rather proto-writing or
just basic pictures. The first accepted system is probably cuneiform, ca
3400 BCE.
The
Voynich Manuscript is one of the most intriguing and befuddling books
in existence — and it’s either the world’s greatest fake or else a hint
about something we really don’t understand. It’s thought to come from
around the 15th century, and is vaguely encyclopedic. We have no idea
who the author was, what it says, or even how the script is used — a
fact not helped by missing pages. Statistical analysis shows some
similarities in form to English and Latin, but even after decades of
cryptographers attempting to figure out how this information was encoded
and how the alphabet works, we’re not really any further. The Voynich
is something of a holy grail for people obsessed with language and
puzzles, and it’s one of those things where I desperately hope we do
crack it, because I would dearly love to understand what it really says.
In
the earlier parts of the 20th century, the academic and classical world
was shocked when scientists managed to decipher one of the ancient
languages of Crete: Linear B. By 1951, not only had the symbols been
explained, but a pronunciation guide was created, and it was shown to be
an ancient form of Greek, despite the academic consensus to the
opposite. This advancement spurred a new generation of interest in
picking apart dead writing systems, and the two most obvious candidates
were the predecessors to Linear B: namely Linear A and Cretian
Heiroglyphs. Yet, here we are a century later, and we still have no idea
how to pick apart these ancient scripts, which were used around 2000
BCE. Unlike some of the other examples on this list there are no
shortages of examples, as dozens of inscriptions have been found, and
there’s even some crossover of symbols between Linear A and Linear B,
yet scientists still haven’t managed to figure out what any of it says.
The
people or Rapa Nui left behind one of the deepest and most endearing
mysteries to modern historians. The Moai of Easter Island have entered
the public consciousness as amazing ancient artifacts that represent the
perils of over-zealousness and environmental ignorance. They chopped
down all their forests and killed all their animals to make more
religious statues. What most people don’t know is that there appears to
be a written script associated with the society, too. Called Rongorongo,
these series of inscriptions remain completely untranslatable despite
being at the very least a type of proto-writing. The letters are found
an 24 or so hunks of wood, usually in incredibly oddly shaped tablets
and the occasional staff. Unfortunately, only a few pieces survive, and
they’re in poor condition scattered around the world. According to the
oral histories of the people in the area, only very few of the elite
were ever taught to read, of whom none survive. You know what’s the
craziest thing about this? If it actually is a written language, it
represents a completely independent invention of one of the key
characteristics of humanity. None of the other Pacific Island cultures
had anything like this. It might not be a true writing system, but
rather a proto-writing, or else a mnemonic device for recording
genealogy or navigation — like you see with Maori carving in New
Zealand. It’s still incredibly intriguing, but will probably never be
deciphered.
source : http://brainz.org/13-most-mysterious-unsolved-writing-systems/
The history of writing is a long and interesting one. Without living users and comparison examples, an archaeologist that unearths a new script is probably going to spend the rest of their life scratching their head and trying to translate it. Without the equivalent of a Rosetta stone, it's almost impossible to reconstruct a dead writing system. These 13 examples have defied the best efforts of cryptographers, scientists and translators to pick them apart.
13. Quipu
12. Rohonc Codex
11. Isthmian
10. Singapore Stone
9. Phaistos Disc
8. Southwest Paleohispanic Script
7. Olmec
6. Indus Script
5. Issyk Kurgan
4. Jiahu
3. Voynich Manuscript
2. Linear A
1. Rongorongo
source : http://brainz.org/13-most-mysterious-unsolved-writing-systems/
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