Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6800333> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 35 of
35
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6800333 subject Q6812182.
- Q6800333 subject Q8251586.
- Q6800333 subject Q8549620.
- Q6800333 abstract "The McClelland Sherd, Tell Jisr Sherd or El-Jisr Sherd is a fragment of pottery discovered by McClelland at Tell Jisr, near Rashaya in Lebanon and first studied by George E. Mendenhall in 1971.The ostracon displays a series of incisions in the pottery that have been suggested to be an early type of Bronze Age writing. The text has been compared to Byblian pseudo-hieroglyphic, but also Minoan Linear A and Linear B, Anatolian, Canaanite and various other old languages. It is regarded as a rare trace of early written communication and important for further academic investigation. The pottery sherd shows a badly defined row of symbols in what some consider to be an abstract linear rather than pictographic form of character. It has not been reliably dated however suggestions have been made of c. 1800 BC or earlier. It has a double rope moulding that is similar to other Middle Bronze Age pottery from the Euphrates valley area of Syria. Dr. Cherie J. Lenzen has also suggested similar features were noted on pottery found at Tell Irbid in northern Jordan. Despite calls for dismissal or denial of the sherd as a "by-form" of the alphabet by Frank M. Cross, Mendenhall has said that the sherd "clearly exhibits both the dâl and the thâ of later Eastern alphabets". He states "the sherd is perhaps older than any other alphabetic inscription so far discovered".".
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q1018471.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q11642.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q11761.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q134178.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q1343665.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q1430954.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q147085.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q159791.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q1708063.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q173532.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q190102.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q25914.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q26257.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q30972.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q34589.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q37260.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q3820.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q42302.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q5538770.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q6812182.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q747547.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q7697425.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q810.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q822.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q8251586.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q834459.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q8549620.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q858.
- Q6800333 wikiPageWikiLink Q9779.
- Q6800333 comment "The McClelland Sherd, Tell Jisr Sherd or El-Jisr Sherd is a fragment of pottery discovered by McClelland at Tell Jisr, near Rashaya in Lebanon and first studied by George E. Mendenhall in 1971.The ostracon displays a series of incisions in the pottery that have been suggested to be an early type of Bronze Age writing. The text has been compared to Byblian pseudo-hieroglyphic, but also Minoan Linear A and Linear B, Anatolian, Canaanite and various other old languages.".
- Q6800333 label "McClelland Sherd".