Dipylon oldest Inscription in archaic Greek
Dipylon inscription
Oenochoe Athens
Was the oldest inscription in archaic Greek found on a clay pot at the Dipylon Gate in Athens the prize for dancers –
or a coded description of Plato’s unwritten doctrines?
Dipylon Inscription
Plato Cratylus
Was the oldest inscription in archaic Greek found on a clay jug at the Dipylon Gate in Athens the prize for dancers — or a coded description of Plato’s unwritten doctrines?
Philosopher Plato described in his “enigmatic dialogue” about the meaning of names and symbols, the Cratylus, that letters can be used as symbols in a conventional way, but also as images and numbers to represent higher knowledge through “intimation” when glyphs become signs rather than sounds.
Were Archaic Greek letters used as coded glyphs, as images to illustrate the mystic numbers of Pythagoras to explain the meditation system of the Buddha in the 6th century BC?
Can the link be traced from the mystic numbers of Pythagoras used to describe the meditation system of the Buddha in the 6th century to the runes in Scandinavia used until the 14th century?
Mysteries of texts in Europe:
clues there to see but not noticed
Despite the long line of archaeological treasures filled with clues on how to decipher coded texts objects in Europe continue to be a mystery, inscriptions stay a closed book, the secret code cannot be cracked.
Dipylon inscription with Phaistos Disk symbols: overview of the meaning
Phaistos Disk 47 coded pictures, master key to translate the Dipylon inscription
Trail of clues to unlock hidden layers of knowledge
An endless stream of visual illustrations of pictures on objects big and small used for centuries to describe Europe’s hidden culture of peace and wisdom cannot be read because of the belief in the power of the written word, lock into and endless search of looking but not seeing.