1935
DOI: 10.2307/289704
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Letters of Cadmus

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“…First of all, it implies that the Linear B script was written on palm leaves. As mentioned above, this idea has been put forward before, but it has not found 85 See also, for example, the remark of Carpenter (1935) 8: 'Since the locality is right, the environment is right, why should we not accept the Greek folk memory tradition as a true tradition and, taking the Herodotean phrase, call this Helladic writing "Cadmean letters"?' Similarly, Phillips (1957) 272-75 suggested that the story of Palamedes as inventor or introducer of writing must refer to Aegean writing systems and not the alphabet.…”
Section: Preliminary Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First of all, it implies that the Linear B script was written on palm leaves. As mentioned above, this idea has been put forward before, but it has not found 85 See also, for example, the remark of Carpenter (1935) 8: 'Since the locality is right, the environment is right, why should we not accept the Greek folk memory tradition as a true tradition and, taking the Herodotean phrase, call this Helladic writing "Cadmean letters"?' Similarly, Phillips (1957) 272-75 suggested that the story of Palamedes as inventor or introducer of writing must refer to Aegean writing systems and not the alphabet.…”
Section: Preliminary Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…65 A similar suggestion has been made by Corcella (1986) with respect to the Pelasgic letters, see below, section XI. 66 See, for example, Carpenter (1935) and Mylonas (1966) 204, who sees the connection in the fact that the letters were painted in red, and Ahl (1967), who links phoinikeia grammata to palm-leaf writing (see also below, section VI). 67 Ní Mheallaigh (2012) 182.…”
Section: Lydians and Ioniansmentioning
confidence: 99%