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...Louis Dyor, M. A., gave the second of his three lectures on "Recent Discoveries in Crete" in the Fogg Lecture Room last night, taking as his special subject "The Cretan Alphabets." He said in part...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Cretan Alphabets. | 12/19/1900 | See Source »

...called a Western civilization. In the Western part of this East-Mediterranean area, Mr. Arthur Evans in 1894 found some records of an ancient Western system of writing, an outgrowth of the early savage pictograph made in all parts of the Mediterranean district by primitive mankind. He found on Cretan engraved stones a system of Cretan pictographs corresponding to the Hittite pictograph. He also found a system of Cretan linear signs analogous to the Capriote characters. We can approximately make out that these Western systems of writing, centered in Crete, go back to the date of the early Egyptian Hieratic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Cretan Alphabets. | 12/19/1900 | See Source »

...sudden collapse of the Mycenaean civilization was roughly coincident with the first appearance of iron in common use on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean. Mycenaean Troy was ravaged and burned, so was Mycenae itself, and so was the great Cretan Labyrinth at Knossos. Facts are not lacking even now, and will with time grow abundant, which illustrate the transition from bronze to iron in the Mediterranean basin. The fruitful beginnings of Mycenaean art and civilization in the early Bronze Age of the European Mediterranean basin were not brought there from any northern or northeastern part of the world...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Mycenaean Age. | 12/18/1900 | See Source »

...Lectures on Recent Discoveries in Crete. II. The Cretan Alphabets. (Illustrated by the Stereopticon.) Mr. Louis Dyer, of Oxford. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar. | 12/18/1900 | See Source »

...which contained a large number of inscriptions, both in pictorial and linear writing. Up to the present time however no one has been able to translate them. The lecture to night will be of an introductory nature. On Tuesday and Friday nights the lectures will take up this ancient Cretan alphabet and the discoveries at Knossos and the Dictaen Cave. The three lectures will be illustrated by the stereopticon...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Dyer's First Lecture Tonight. | 12/17/1900 | See Source »

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