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Evans, Arthur J.
Scripta minoa: the written documents of minoan Crete with special reference to the archives of Knossos (Band 1): The hieroglyphic and primitive linear classes — Oxford, 1909

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.806#0029

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SUCCESSIVE TYPES OF MINOAN WRITING

15

the baby Zeus had been fed with this mingled milk and honey.' We are expressly
told- that the ritual performed in honour of the Cretan Zeus set forth the miraculous
preservation of the infant and his nourishment by Amaltheia and Melissa, personifying
the goat and bee. However this may be, the Libation Table takes us back to a period
when, as the concordant testimony of the early Cretan religious relics shows, the
Mother-Goddess herself was the principal object of cult.

ribed Libation Table from the Dictaean Cave. [|] {Upper face, restored in outline.)

But the most remarkable phenomenon presented by the remaining portion of the Inscription
Dictaean Libation Table was part of an inscription incised along its upper surface in °n Table in
front of the cups (see Fig. 8). The inscription was in well-defined characters linear char-
belonging, as will be shown below, to an advanced type of linear script (Class A), ntersk°f
which at Knossos is confined to the middle period of the later Palace. It reads from
left to right, and consists of eight or nine characters and two stops. If we may
suppose it to have been symmetrically arranged, it would have originally consisted of
about fifteen characters, and perhaps four words. We have here an inscription cut

' Diod. v. 70.

5 Lactantius, Defalsa Religion*
 
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