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General Category => General Radio Discussion => Topic started by: Fansome on July 22, 2013, 0208 UTC

Title: The Riddle of the Labyrinth: The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code
Post by: Fansome on July 22, 2013, 0208 UTC
‘The Riddle of the Labyrinth: The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code’ by Margalit Fox
By Robert B. Mitchell,

Cryptography THE RIDDLE OF THE LABYRINTH The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code By Margalit Fox Ecco. 363 pp. $27.99

Journalist Margalit Fox puts her storytelling skills and background in linguistics to good use in recounting the tale of the mysterious clay tablets unearthed in 1900 among the ruins of the palace of Knossos on Crete. The discovery by British archaeologist Arthur Evans (knighted in 1911) set in motion decades of study and debate regarding the tablets, which are covered by what appear to be images of men, women, horses and a variety of puzzling symbols. Are the characters of this writing system, which came to be known as “Linear B,” pieces of a syllabary or an unknown alphabet?

Drawing on her command of linguistics and philology, Fox guides the reader through the complicated business of deciphering the tablets. In a delightful touch, she employs characters devised by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in “The Adventure of the Dancing Men” to explain principles of cryptographic analysis. Fox also introduces a figure who has been largely left out of the story: Alice Kober. Michael Ventris, the gifted British architect who finally deciphered the tablets, often gets most of the credit for the solving the mystery. But much of his work was built on the meticulous research of Kober, a Brooklyn College classicist and philologist who studied the mysteries of Linear B from 1928 until her death in 1950.

Working at home (after teaching classes) with limited quantities of paper and primitive tablet images, Kober painstakingly analyzed the Linear B figures, assembling a database of 180,000 note cards. Her monographs, published in scholarly journals, prepared the groundwork for the breakthroughs made by Ventris in the early 1950s. Fox’s achievement here is to make this fascinating tale accessible to a broader audience.

— Robert B. Mitchell
Title: Re: The Riddle of the Labyrinth: The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code
Post by: Pigmeat on July 22, 2013, 0406 UTC
"Well, it looks like we've found ourselves in a Labyrinth, young Adso. Tie the thread on the bottom of your cloak to the table leg in the room you're in. Now take a lantern and keep turning right as you descend, I'll do the same and turn to the left." Fr. William of Baskerville
Title: Re: The Riddle of the Labyrinth: The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code
Post by: Zoidberg on July 22, 2013, 0814 UTC
Which explains how Adso ended up nekkid with the peasant girl, whose name he never learned.  Too much labyrinth, not quite enough thread.
Title: Re: The Riddle of the Labyrinth: The Quest to Crack an Ancient Code
Post by: Pigmeat on July 22, 2013, 1303 UTC
You'd be surprised at how often it happens. You're knocking around in an ancient library wandering the stacks and shelves then suddenly you realize your lost. Adso was a novice, he didn't know you always bring a back-up robe for just such emergencies.

He did know her name,though I can't recall it now. It meant, "The girl most likely to be a witch", in the medieval Appian Vulgate of the day. I understand it's modern equivalent would be "Snookie".