Greek Writing from Knossos to Homer

Greek Writing from Knossos to Homer

  • Roger D. Woodard
Publisher:Oxford University PressISBN 13: 9780195355666ISBN 10: 0195355660

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Greek Writing from Knossos to Homer is written by Roger D. Woodard and published by Oxford University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0195355660 (ISBN 10) and 9780195355666 (ISBN 13).

Greek Writing from Knossos to Homer examines the origin of the Greek alphabet. Departing from previous accounts, Roger Woodard places the advent of the alphabet within an unbroken continuum of Greek literacy beginning in the Mycenean era. He argues that the creators of the Greek alphabet, who adapted the Phoenician consonantal script, were scribes accustomed to writing Greek with the syllabic script of Cyprus. Certain characteristic features of the Cypriot script--for example, its strategy for representing consonant sequences and elements of Cypriot Greek phonology--were transferred to the new alphabetic script. Proposing a Cypriot origin of the alphabet at the hands of previously literate adapters brings clarity to various problems of the alphabet, such as the Greek use of the Phoenician sibilant letters. The alphabet, rejected by the post- Bronze Age "Mycenaean" culture of Cyprus, was exported west to the Aegean, where it gained a foothold among a then illiterate Greek people emerging from the Dark Age.