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A Mysterious 4000-Year-Old “Lost” Writing System Has Finally Been Decoded, in a Modern “Rosetta Stone” Breakthrough
The Debrief ^ | April 29, 2026 | Micah Hanks

Posted on 05/01/2026 8:56:03 PM PDT by Red Badger

An example of Linear Elamite( Image Credit: Darafsh/Wikimedia/CC 3.0)

An ancient Iranian mystery has finally been solved, according to a French archaeologist who reports successfully cracking the code to an enigmatic, undeciphered writing system.

Known as Linear Elamite, the 4000-year-old script—once considered impossible to decode—has now been unlocked by François Desset, in an achievement that has drawn comparisons to Jean-François Champollion’s famous deciphering of the enigmatic Rosetta Stone.

Desset, a 43-year-old archaeological researcher based at the University of Liege in Belgium, says the remarkable ancient script is the only truly “local” writing system from the country’s early history, which is currently embattled.

The Enigma of Linear Elamite Originally discovered more than a century ago during archaeological reconnaissance at the Iranian Susa site, Desset’s first encounters with the ancient script occurred two decades ago, while working in the country’s southern region.

There, he and other archaeologists participated in discoveries very much like something out of an Indiana Jones film—the uncovering of ancient tablets covered in an enigmatic, undeciphered language.

Linear Elamite comprises 77 individual characters, including geometric patterns and various other shapes, making it distinct among ancient writing systems.

Linear Elamite

A tablet featuring one of the known surviving examples of Linear Elamite (Image Credit: Zunkir/CC 3.0)

The scripts are attributed by scholars to the 4th millennium Elam civilization, a Bronze Age state for which Susa once served as capital. It was there that, in 1903, French missionaries first uncovered the peculiar script on ancient tablets, which remained the sole examples of what came to be known as Linear Elamite for many decades.

Unlocking an Ancient “Lost” Script

Even with new examples in their possession, Desset and his colleagues had no more success in deciphering the curious ancient language than others had before them.

That is, until he learned of the existence of previous discoveries that included a collection of ancient vases, some of which were covered in this mysterious writing system. Traveling to London, Desset visited what is known as the Mahboubian collection, which borrows its title from the exiled Iranian family of the same name.

The assortment, described as “one of the most impressive private collections of ancient Iranian art” in the world and spanning an extensive period of the country’s history, also contains several examples of Linear Elamite, ten of which Desset was able to access for study.

According to Desset, a breakthrough began to near as he clued in on certain “proper names” in the ancient script, which described names of locations and individuals, including royalty.

“The key to deciphering a script,” Desset told France 24, is in “names of places, gods, [and] kings.”

Such had been the case for his 19th-century predecessor, Champollion, whose historic breakthrough in deciphering hieroglyphics on the Rosetta Stone was preceded by the successful identification of symbols associated with the names of the rulers Ptolemy and Cleopatra.

For Desset, his “Ptolemy” turned out to be an ancient Iranian ruler named Shilhaha.

The Shilhaha Key

An ancient Elamite who ruled during the 20th century BC, Shilhaha is recognized as the founder of the Sukkalmah Dynasty. From his examination of a particular four-symbol sequence, Desset noticed that the last two symbols were identical—just like modern spellings of the same name, which feature a similar repetition.

Soon, this tiny crack in the edifice of the longstanding mystery began to widen, and now Desset has been hard at work expanding his knowledge of Linear Elamite to as many as 45 inscriptions.

Additionally, Desset says he hopes to take his studies even further back in Iranian history, to some of the earliest known written languages, including proto-Elamite.

Editor’s Note: This article has been updated to correct a previous version which provided an inaccurate reference to other early language groups that have seen use in Iran over the centuries.

Micah Hanks is the Editor-in-Chief and Co-Founder of The Debrief. A longtime reporter on science, defense, and technology with a focus on space and astronomy, he can be reached at micah@thedebrief.org. Follow him on X @MicahHanks, and at micahhanks.com.


TOPICS: Books/Literature; History; Society
KEYWORDS: archaeology; elam; elamite; elamites; epigraphyandlanguage; godsgravesglyphs; iran; linearelamite; literacy; persia; shilhaha; sukkalmahdynasty; sussa; sussasite; writing
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1 posted on 05/01/2026 8:56:03 PM PDT by Red Badger
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To: SunkenCiv

PinGGG!....................


2 posted on 05/01/2026 8:56:28 PM PDT by Red Badger (Iryna Zarutska, May 22, 2002 Kyiv, Ukraine – August 22, 2025 Charlotte, North Carolina Say her name)
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To: Red Badger

“Mohammad is King”?


3 posted on 05/01/2026 9:02:58 PM PDT by Paladin2 (YMMV)
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To: Red Badger

On to Linear B..


4 posted on 05/01/2026 9:03:56 PM PDT by RitchieAprile (available monkeys looking for the change..)
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To: Red Badger

“Be sure to drink your....”


5 posted on 05/01/2026 9:04:20 PM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is opinion or satire. Or both.)
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To: Red Badger
Noted that he referenced Iranian history instead of Persian history.

I would guess that this is due to entering Iran post 1979 and not upsetting the nuts that allowed him to enter Iran.

6 posted on 05/01/2026 9:10:30 PM PDT by Deaf Smith (When a Texan takes his chances, chances will be taken that's for sure.)
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To: BenLurkin

“Be sure to drink your....mead and pomegranate Juice.”.........


7 posted on 05/01/2026 9:12:03 PM PDT by Red Badger (Iryna Zarutska, May 22, 2002 Kyiv, Ukraine – August 22, 2025 Charlotte, North Carolina Say her name)
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To: RitchieAprile

I think Linear A, is still unknown... Crete/Minoans.


8 posted on 05/01/2026 9:24:10 PM PDT by pacificus
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To: Deaf Smith

It was the Shah in the 1950s who asked the world to refer to Iran by the name it always used for itself, namely “Iran”. Ancient Iran was known as Airyana Vaejah (Old Iranian) or Eran (Middle Persian), which means “Land of the Aryans”

Persia is a part of Iran in the same way as Holland is a part of the Netherlands.

The name Iran predates Islam by millennia. It means “land of the Aryans”. The Aryans were people who lived in Iran and northern India (incidentally the Nordic/Germanic people were/are not Aryans.

Tge northern Indians also were Aryans. Āryāvarta (meaning “Land of the Aryans”) is an ancient Sanskrit term for the northern Indian subcontinent, specifically covering the area between the Himalayas and the Vindhya Mountains, extending from the western sea to the eastern.


9 posted on 05/01/2026 9:34:11 PM PDT by Cronos (Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.)
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To: Red Badger

I really hold to the Elamo-Dravidian linguistic theory that Elamite is a related language to the Dravidian languages of the Indian subcontinent.

Eelam means a homeland in Tamil, the most ancient Dravidian tongue. And bother Dravidian languages (Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada, Telugu, Tulu) and Elamite were agglutination languages as was Sumerian and as are the Kartvelian languages like “Georgian”. This would signify a group of agglutinative language speakers probably originating in the Zagros mountains who took agricultural practices invented in that area around 8000 BC and took them east to the indus valley civilization and west as far as Basque country, which is also an agglutinative language


10 posted on 05/01/2026 9:41:30 PM PDT by Cronos (Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.)
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To: Red Badger

Very interesting. Thanks.


11 posted on 05/01/2026 10:21:29 PM PDT by mairdie
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To: Red Badger

BTTT


12 posted on 05/01/2026 10:28:04 PM PDT by fidelis (Ecce Crucem Domini! Fugite partes adversae! Vicit Leo de tribu Juda, Radix David! Alleluia!)
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To: Red Badger

So what do those writings say?


13 posted on 05/01/2026 10:36:46 PM PDT by aquila48 (Do not let them make you "care" ! Guilting you is how they control you. )
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To: aquila48

These articles always discuss they cracked the code and then leave you hanging as to what is actually written.


14 posted on 05/01/2026 11:21:02 PM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: Red Badger

╨┌╓╛╫┘─╓│┐


15 posted on 05/01/2026 11:39:45 PM PDT by Tellurian (Any cleverness from a DemonicRat is quickly invested in deception. Ds are world class deceivers.)
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To: Deaf Smith
Noted that he referenced Iranian history instead of Persian history.

Did even Persia exist 4,000 years ago?

16 posted on 05/01/2026 11:44:21 PM PDT by Angelino97
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To: Red Badger
Claude is sometimes good at finding patterns in images of ancient writing, so I submitted the article and the two images above to Claude. Here's the conversation [Claude is sometimes very good at analyzing images but still makes mistakes, so keep that in mind]:

Me:

Here are the images from the article. What can you tell me about these writings from your familiarity with other writings from that era and area?
Claude:

These are fascinating to look at closely. Let me share observations on both:

Image 1 (the stone wall inscription) appears to be a bilingual or dual-format inscription — you can see a clear vertical dividing line separating two distinct sections. The left side has longer, more flowing linear strokes arranged in horizontal rows, while the right side is organized into a more rigid grid pattern with individual cells — almost like a table or ledger format. That structural difference within the same artifact is itself significant, possibly indicating Linear Elamite alongside cuneiform, which would be exactly the kind of bilingual key Desset needed.

Image 2 (the clay tablet on a stand) is heavily cracked but shows the characteristic Linear Elamite symbols clearly — you can pick out what look like geometric forms: X shapes, cross/plus symbols, semicircles, triangles, and what appear to be stylized human or animal figures in the lower registers. The dots punched into the surface may be numerical notation.

What's recognizable across both: The symbols have a surprisingly consistent visual vocabulary — angular geometric forms, repeated motifs, clear horizontal line organization. Nothing that maps to any alphabet you'd recognize, but the structural logic — consistent symbol size, clear directionality, organized rows — signals a mature, developed writing system rather than proto-writing or pictographs.

The tablet in Image 2 particularly shows what looks like narrative or accounting content in its lower rows — the figures seem more pictographic there, which might represent an earlier or more formal register of the script.

    

Me:

Elaborate on any patterns, themes, or potential uses intended by the writings (i.e., story narrative or personal letter or an accounting record)?
Claude

Let me look carefully at both artifacts with fresh eyes.

Image 2 (the clay tablet) — strongest read:

This one gives the most structural clues. The organization strongly suggests administrative or accounting use rather than narrative:

This reads most like a temple or palace inventory/receipt — exactly the kind of document Bronze Age administrative centers produced by the thousands.

Image 1 (the wall inscription) — different category entirely:

This feels like something more monumental and declarative:

The broader pattern:

What's striking is that both artifacts fit perfectly into what we know from contemporary Mesopotamian civilization next door — the Sumerians and Akkadians were producing exactly these two document types simultaneously: clay tablets for daily administration, stone inscriptions for royal monuments. The Elamites appear to have mirrored that institutional structure with their own indigenous script.

So the honest synthesis is: accounting and royal proclamation — the two things every Bronze Age state needed to record. Not literature, not personal correspondence. Governance and inventory.

That actually raises the tantalizing question of whether, once fully translated, Linear Elamite might reveal trade records connecting Elam to the Indus Valley civilization — a commercial relationship archaeologists know existed but have very limited textual evidence for.

Me:
What do the recursive elements or patterns in the writings tell us (if anything)?
Claude

Yes — looking carefully at both images, several patterns emerge that are analytically interesting:

Recurring Symbol Units

Across both artifacts you can identify what appear to be the same symbols appearing repeatedly in different combinations — suggesting a syllabic or consonantal system rather than pure pictography. Specifically:

Compositional Logic

Symbol Complexity Gradient

This is perhaps the most intriguing pattern:

Bilateral Symmetry as a Design Principle

Several individual symbols appear to be mirror constructions — a form and its reflection combined into one sign. This is unusual and distinctive. It could indicate:

What's Notably Absent

As important as what's there is what isn't:

Bottom Line Assessment

The patterns collectively reinforce the administrative/accounting interpretation, but with one refinement worth noting. The recurring symmetrical symbols and the monumental stone context of Image 1 suggest that artifact at minimum has a dedicatory or formulaic religious header — a standardized invocation to a deity before the administrative content. That was nearly universal in Bronze Age Near Eastern documents of any importance.

It would not surprise me at all if Image 1 reads something like: "By the grace of [deity name], [king's name] caused this to be recorded — [inventory or decree follows]."

That formula appears in virtually every contemporary culture across the ancient Near East. The Elamites almost certainly had their own version.


17 posted on 05/01/2026 11:51:40 PM PDT by RoosterRedux ( )
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18 posted on 05/01/2026 11:51:45 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (TDS -- it's not just for DNC shills anymore -- oh, wait, yeah it is.)
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To: Red Badger; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; ...
Thanks RB!

19 posted on 05/01/2026 11:53:16 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (TDS -- it's not just for DNC shills anymore -- oh, wait, yeah it is.)
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To: RoosterRedux

#1 Possibly a Tax Law.

#2 Probably a Tax Receipt.............


20 posted on 05/02/2026 12:03:09 AM PDT by Red Badger (Iryna Zarutska, May 22, 2002 Kyiv, Ukraine – August 22, 2025 Charlotte, North Carolina Say her name)
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