, Santorini Linear A has been found chiefly on
Crete, but also at other sites in Greece, as well as Turkey and Israel. The extant corpus, comprising some 1,427 specimens, totals 7,362 to 7,396 signs. Linear A has been written on various media, such as stone offering tables and vessels, gold and silver hairpins, roundels, and ceramics. The earliest inscriptions of Linear A come from
Phaistos, in a layer dated at the end of the Middle Minoan II period: that is, no later than c. 1700 BC. Linear A inscriptions have been found throughout the island of Crete and also on some Aegean islands (Kythera, Kea, Thera, Melos, Samothrace), in mainland Greece (Ayios Stephanos) in Laconia, on the west coast of Asia Minor (Miletus, Troy), and in the Levant (Tel Haror, Tel Lachish). The first comprehensive compendium of Linear A inscriptions sometimes referred to as GORILA (from Godart Olivier Recueil des inscriptions en lineaire A) was produced by
Louis Godart and
Jean-Pierre Olivier in multiple volumes between 1976 and 1985. In 2011 work began on a supplement to that compendium. In 2020 a project was begun, called SigLA, to put all the known Linear A inscriptions online at a single site.
Tablets , Archeological Museum of
Sitia Almost all Linear A tablets, most in a fragmentary condition, have been found on the island of Crete, dated to the
Neopalatial Period. At that time Crete was divided by mountains and other geographic features into a number of polities, each with its own urban center. These tablets have been found at
Hagia Triada (147 tablets),
Petras (2 tablets),
Phaistos (26 tablets),
Knossos (6 tablets),
Archanes (7 tablets),
Myrtos Pyrgos (2 tablets),
Palaikastro (2 tablets),
Zakros (31 tablets),
Tylissos (2 tablets),
Malia (6 tablets),
Gournia (1 tablet), and
Khania (99 tablets). One Linear A tablet was found on
Kea in the
Cyclades. Three tablet fragments were found on the island of
Santorini (Thera). The handful of known
Cretan Hieroglyphs tablets (with relatively few signs) were also found on Crete at Malia and
Kato Symi.
Sealed documents Seals and clay sealings served the same role of inventory control and ownership as in the ancient Near East and Egypt. Large numbers of sealings have been found, primarily on Crete and in the Late Minoan IB period. The primary sources of sealed documents come from Haghia Triada (1103), Zakros (560), Khania (210), Knossos (125), Phaistos (35),
Malia (6), and Tylissos (5). It is not clear what was commonly used to impress the sealing as only a few Linear A inscribed "
seal stones" have been found. In other regions cylinder seals and stamp seals fulfilled this role. Sealed documents are divided by archaeologists into four classes: • Hanging nodules – sealed lumps of clay originally attached to string • Parcel nodules – lumps of clay with sealing on back • Noduli – clay lumps like hanging nodules but not formerly string attached
Libation tables A group of Minoan finds, usually from sanctuaries, have traditionally been called libation tables. They come in full sized and miniature versions, usually of stone. Because of the findspots, at cultic sites like
Mount Juktas, they are usually assumed to be religious in nature though that is not certain. So far about 1000 libation tables have been recovered at 27 different sites on Crete, of which 41 have Linear A inscriptions. These inscriptions follow a standardized "libation formula", a formula also found on a few other objects, primarily vessels. The "libation formula" has been much studied. A similar construct in
Cretan Hieroglyphs, the "Archanes Formula", is the main proposed link to Linear A.
Other sources While most of the recovered Linear A signs have come from tablets, sealed documents, libation tables and related ritual objects, a number of very short Linear A inscriptions have been found in the Minoan area of operation, primarily in the form of potmarks and
mason's marks. A problem is that it can be difficult to tell if a single-sign (or even doubleton) is Linear A,
Linear B, or
Cretan Hieroglyphs because of the overlap in sign use. Vessel sherds were found at
Traostalos, bearing three signs in total. Four vase sherds were found at Thera with signs, as well as a
ostrakon with one sign. Two pithoi with very fragmentary inscriptions were found at
Pseira. Graffiti has been found at places like Hagia Triada. A small clay ball with three Linear A signs was found at Mikro Vouni on the island of
Samothrace. A small stone tab with two signs was excavated in Ayios Stephanos,
Laconia. A silver hair pin and a gold ring, both with fairly long Linear A inscriptions, were found at Mavro Spelio in Knossos. At
Armenoi a stone amulet was found in a tholos grave from the Linear Minoan IB period inscribed with a combination of two Linear A ideograms. A Linear A inscription was said to have been found in southeast Bulgaria. Another, somewhat more solid, find was at
Tel Lachish. A Minoan
graffito found at
Tel Haror on a vessel fragment is either Linear A or
Cretan hieroglyphs. Several tablets inscribed in signs similar to Linear A were found at
Troy in northwestern Anatolia. While their status is disputed, they may be imports, as there is no evidence of Minoan presence in the Troad. Classification of these signs as a unique
Trojan script (proposed by contemporary Russian linguist
Nikolai Kazansky) is not accepted by other linguists. Two Linear A inscribed clay spindle whorls were also found at Troy. ==Chronology==