Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 920731
Epigraphical features of economic texts in Linear A
Epigraphical features of economic texts in Linear A // Palatial Economy in the Ancient Near East and in the Aegean / Calier, Pierre et al. (ur.).
Pisa : Rim: Fabrizio Serra Editore, 2017. str. 93-103
CROSBI ID: 920731 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Epigraphical features of economic texts in Linear A
Autori
Tomas, Helena
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Palatial Economy in the Ancient Near East and in the Aegean
Urednik/ci
Calier, Pierre et al.
Izdavač
Fabrizio Serra Editore
Grad
Pisa : Rim
Godina
2017
Raspon stranica
93-103
ISBN
978-88-6227-921-5
ISSN
1974-0565
Ključne riječi
Linear A, economic texts, epigraphical features
Sažetak
It is well known that Linear A texts are poorly organised in comparison with their Linear B counterparts. Epigraphical features that could improve their visual appearance, such as ruling lines or spacing, are used randomly. Most Linear A tablets are, furthermore, messy, sometimes illegible, and therefore confusing. Recently I have investigated the possibility that these characteristics of Linear A tablets resulted from the personal writing habits of their scribes. I wondered, for example, if the use of random ruling lines separating different contextual units on Linear A tablets, or transactional terms like KU-RO (designating ‘total’), was typical of some scribes, rather than being a general Linear A pattern. In general, I assumed that the messy state of Linear A texts resulted from personal preferences, and did not have some more significant reason behind it, e.g. that tablets were only drafts and not final records, or represented a lower administrative level in comparison with the neat Linear B tablets. However, this approach yielded no results, since it proved impossible to establish any meaningful correlation between such epigraphical features and particular Linear A scribal hands. The low number of Linear A tablets made that study even more difficult. Another possibility remains to be investigated: that the use of epigraphical features was determined by the contents of Linear A tablets. Most of these tablets are economic texts, but three major groups can be distinguished among them: those that list only people, those that list only commodities, and those that list both people and commodities. It would be a step forward to establish that some epigraphical features, for example ruling lines, occur on only one group of tablets, not the others. In this paper, therefore, I will explore the contents – epigraphy correlation of economic texts in Linear A.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Arheologija