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Version 1.0.1, 21 February 2022

Version history:

1.0, 17 February 2022

1.01, 21 February 2022

About the script

Linear B, the script found on tablets in excavations of Knossos (Crete), Pylos and Mycenae, remained undeciphered for decades, until, in 1952, Michael Ventris (who profited from the preliminary analyses made by Alice Kober) managed to crack the code. Confirmation of the decipherment followed rapidly: Linear B had been used to write the oldest form of Greek know to us, Mycenaean Greek (15th-13th centuries BCE). Linear B consists of about 90 syllabograms, supplemented with about 165 logograms (or ‘ideograms’) and the so-called ‘Aegean numbers’, a numbering system already used by the Minoan civilization (in Linear A). There are word dividers (a small perpendicular line on the baseline). Linear B is exclusively written horizontally from left to right.

Font and font sizes

Only very few fonts support the rendering of Linear B. We have chosen Noto Sans Linear B because it has been professionally designed. Even so, there are a few software issues in typeset text; fortunately these can be remedied by the typesetter, provided that precise instructions are given. Anyone can download and use Noto Sans Linear B at no cost.

Noto Sans Linear B font sizes:

  • Brill 11 pt ~ Noto Sans Linear B 9¼ pt

  • Brill 10 pt ~ Noto Sans Linear B 8½ pt

  • Brill 9 pt ~ Noto Sans Linear B 8 pt

  • Chapter titles: Brill 16 pt (Bold) ~ Noto Sans Linear B 13½ pt

The Noto Sans Linear B font works on both MS Windows and macOS.

Software issue: Adobe InDesign ‘hides’ some Linear B characters

Many typesetters use Adobe InDesign to perform page layout for PDF production. It has been observed that Adobe InDesign CC 2022 (v. 17.1) fails to render a few Linear B characters: they are 𐀀 (U+10000), 𐀈 (U+10008), 𐀉 (U+10009), 𐀊 (U+1000A), and 𐀍 (U+1000D). The problem seems to be connected with Adobe’s ‘World-Ready Paragraph Composers’, which are used by default by typesetters producing PDF of Brill publications.

In addition, import problems from .txt (UTF-8) format have been observed in Adobe InDesign CC 2022 (v. 17.1) involving 𐀸 (U+10038): this character was replaced on import with two __ underscore characters (U+005F).

Furthermore, when importing text from either .docx or .txt (UTF-8) formats, 𐄐 (U+10110) and 𐄒 (U+10112) needed a manual application of the Noto Sans Linear B font (the underlying character codes were correct).

These software issues have so far not been found to occur in any other applications including MS Word 365 and web browsers, suggesting that they are connected with the Adobe InDesign software and not with the Noto Sans Linear B font. Without a doubt there is a bug in both of Adobe’s World-Ready Paragraph Composers. And there are probably import filter bugs as well.

Instruction to typesetters dealing with Linear B text

Adobe InDesign users must switch the paragraph composer applied to all paragraphs containing text in the Linear B script, even if there is just one Linear B character, to either of the older Adobe Paragraph Composers: Adobe Paragraph Composer or the Adobe Single-line Paragraph Composer.

Typesetters must also check that 𐀸 (U+10038) is encoded and rendered correctly (check that there are no two consecutive __ underscore (U+005F) characters), and that 𐄐 (U+10110) and 𐄒 (U+10112) are rendered correctly as well – if these occur, of course.

If a paragraph with Linear B characters also contains complex-script text (this includes any bidirectional script such as Phoenician, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic, etc., but also many others!), only switching to an older Adobe Paragraph Composer could prove problematic. Typesetters should then try HarfBuzz as the default OpenType shaper.

In such an event, always contact scripts@brill.com. If Harfbuzz should also fail to solve the problem, a typesetting program other than Adobe InDesign (think LuaTeX as used by TAT Zetwerk) will probably not exhibit this bug.

All Brill personnel sending textual material containing Linear B text to typesetting service providers who use Adobe InDesign must send along the above instruction with each batch containing Linear B material.

Bibliography

Alberto Bernabé and Eugenio R. Luján, Introducción al griego micénico. Gramática, selección de textos y glosario. 2.ª edición, corregida y aumentada (=Monografías de filología griega, 30), Zaragoza (Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza) 2020.