Linear Elamite

Linear Elamite
Linear Elamite characters inventoried by 1912.[1]
Script type [a] or logosyllabic[b]
Time period
c. 2300–1850 BCE
StatusExtinct
DirectionLeft-to-right, right-to-left script Edit this on Wikidata
LanguagesElamite
Related scripts
Parent systems

Linear Elamite was a writing system used in Elam during the Bronze Age between c. 2300 and 1850 BCE, and known mainly from a few extant monumental inscriptions.[5] It was used contemporaneously with Elamite cuneiform and records the Elamite language.[5] The French archaeologist François Desset and his colleagues have argued that it is the oldest known purely phonographic writing system,[5] although others, such as the linguist Michael Mäder, have argued that it is partly logographic.[2][3]

There have been multiple attempts to decipher the script, aided by the discovery of a limited number of multilingual and bigraphic inscriptions. Early efforts by Carl Frank (1912) and Ferdinand Bork (1905, 1924) made limited progress.[6] Later work by Walther Hinz and Piero Meriggi furthered the work.[7][8] Starting in 2018, Desset outlined some of his proposed decipherments of the script accomplished with a team of other scholars.[4][9][10] Their proposed near-complete decipherment was published in 2022,[5] being received positively by some researchers[c] while others[d] remain sceptical until detailed translations of texts have been published.[11][3]


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