Amnisos is mentioned in a few
Linear B tablets, mainly from Knossos, as ,
a-mi-ni-so, reconstructed to *
Amnisos. An example is tablet
KN Gg 705 quoted by Ventris and Chadwick: Amnisos: One jar of honey to
Eleuthia, :One jar of honey to all [of] the gods. . . . The tablet records a votive offering from or at Amnisos to the goddess of childbirth, probably the one worshipped at the cave mentioned above. The word "
a-mi-ni-so" was pivotal in
Michael Ventris' deciphering of
Linear B. Ventris had constructed elaborate tables with possible phonemic values for the syllabary's symbols and had correctly identified key grammatical features such as
declensional
suffixes. He then made the crucial educated guess that a particular word referred to Amnisos, the port of Knossos. The guess proved an inspired one, as it was correct and let all the other pieces of the puzzle fall into place. The date of the Knossos tablets is still uncertain, but it is likely that they belong to the late Bronze Age. Amnisos is mentioned on the itinerary published on the statue base of
Amenophis III at Kom el-Heitan, as an ambassadorial stop to Keftiu (Crete), dated ca. 1380 BCE. By that date, the residents of Knossos and almost certainly of its port, Amnisos, were speaking Greek. In the thumbnail historical sketch given by
John Chadwick in
The Mycenaean World, Chapter 1, Chadwick writes: Crete was occupied down to the fifteenth century by people who did not speak Greek... Instead, they spoke the language that was written in the yet undeciphered script called
Linear A. These people, called Minoans by
Arthur Evans, were extremely influential at sea: Around the sixteenth century the Minoan influence on the mainland becomes very marked. During this floruit, the House of Lilies was occupied. Minoan civilization is not believed to have been warlike; there are few traces of arms and armor. They probably represented a mercantile hegemony, safe in their island home and protected by their fleet. Around 1450 BCE, the villa was burned along with all of the other major sites in Crete except for Knossos. These events are generally interpreted as an interest in ruling the island by Mycenaean Greeks. As the name Amnisos evidences the pre-Greek -
ssos suffix, they probably took the name as it was. == Notes ==