The discovery and decipherment of the trilingual cuneiform inscriptions by Booth

(22 User reviews)   6054
By Betty Young Posted on Dec 25, 2025
In Category - Attention Control
Booth, Arthur John Booth, Arthur John
English
Hey, have you ever wondered how we actually cracked the code to read ancient clay tablets? I just finished this fascinating book about the race to decipher cuneiform. Forget Indiana Jones—this is the real deal. It's about a bunch of brilliant, stubborn, and sometimes rival scholars staring at these weird wedge-shaped marks for decades, trying to figure out what they said. The book follows Arthur John Booth as he walks us through this incredible puzzle. It's not just about ancient kings; it's about the thrill of discovery, the 'aha!' moments, and how we unlocked the voices of a lost civilization. If you like mysteries where the clues are thousands of years old, you'll love this.
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of being included among the great achievements of the nineteenth century. Only a hundred years ago it was still possible to maintain that there was no such thing as cuneiform writing, and that the mysterious figures that went by that name were merely a grotesque form of ornamentation. We propose to recount the method pursued by the long succession of scholars who in the end succeeded in solving the perplexing problem that was presented to them. Few, if any, of those who, in the beginning of last century, occupied themselves with the subject, could have imagined the brilliant discoveries that would result from their tedious labours. In these pages we shall be chiefly occupied with the inscriptions of the Achaemenian kings. They were the first to be discovered and studied, and they possess the peculiar advantage of being, with few exceptions, trilingual. They are, in fact, generally found in three parallel columns, and it was seen that the characters and no doubt the languages also varied in each. It was observed that the writing in one of the columns was much simpler than in the others; the number of different signs being limited to about forty-two. It was assumed that they were alphabetical, whereas there could be little doubt from their great number that the signs in the other columns were syllabic or ideographic. Notwithstanding the comparative simplicity of the former, it was not till forty years had been devoted to their study that the riddle was successfully solved. At length the sound of each letter was fully established, and the words they combined to form were found to belong to a language, akin to Zend, to which the name of Old Persian is now given. From its analogy to Zend and Pehlevi it was a comparatively easy task to assign correct or approximately correct meanings to the words, and to arrive at the sense of the short sentences that occur on the monuments. The first stage in the progress of decipherment was reached in 1845, when Professor Lassen of Bonn published a tentative but fairly correct translation of the whole of the inscriptions then accessible, belonging to the first or Persian column. This success was no doubt a matter of great interest to the philologist; but the inscriptions themselves were found to be almost wholly wanting in historical importance. They were nearly all taken from buildings at Persepolis or elsewhere, and they simply commemorated their erection by Darius or by Xerxes or by Artaxerxes Ochus. They are uniformly conceived in the same set form of words, from which at the most some deductions might be drawn as to the relations existing between the Persian and his god Ormuzd. Two of them indeed were varied by a list of the provinces included in the Empire. It is true the inscription at Behistun was not included in this collection; but even it adds little of importance except with reference to the revolt of the Magian impostor. The publication of this inscription by Major Rawlinson, in 1846, marks the successful termination of the task of deciphering the first column, and a complete mastery over the Old Persian language had then been obtained. It was correctly supposed that the other two columns contained translations of the same Persian text; and the knowledge now acquired of the latter could not but afford an invaluable key to unlock the difficulties of the others. The decipherment of the inscriptions in the second column was attended by even less interest than the first. The language was ascertained to be Scythic, but nothing was found written in it...

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The Story

This book isn't a novel with a traditional plot. Instead, it tells the true story of a massive intellectual puzzle. For centuries, travelers in the Middle East found strange inscriptions carved on ruins—rows of little wedge-shaped marks we call cuneiform. Nobody alive could read them. The book follows the bumpy, decades-long journey to crack this code. It focuses on the key players, like Henry Rawlinson, who famously risked his life to copy inscriptions from a sheer cliff face in Persia. Booth explains how these scholars used a single, crucial trilingual inscription (like the ancient Rosetta Stone) as their starting point, slowly piecing together the languages of ancient Persian, Babylonian, and Elamite.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was the sheer human drama of it all. This wasn't solved overnight. It was a story of brilliant guesses, frustrating dead ends, and fierce competition. You get to watch the moment of discovery unfold, like when someone finally realized a certain group of wedges spelled out the name of a famous king. It makes you appreciate how much work went into giving us back the history of Mesopotamia. Reading it, you feel like you're looking over the shoulder of these detectives as they work.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs who want the 'how' behind the facts, or anyone who loves a good puzzle. It's for the reader who thinks, 'How on earth did they figure *that* out?' While it deals with complex topics, Booth writes with clarity for a curious general audience. You don't need to know ancient languages to enjoy this story of lost words found.



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Lucas Williams
11 months ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

Emily Williams
1 year ago

From the very first page, the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Worth every second.

Logan Lopez
4 months ago

I have to admit, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. Thanks for sharing this review.

Noah Robinson
8 months ago

I came across this while browsing and the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. I would gladly recommend this title.

Ava Martinez
2 months ago

Good quality content.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (22 User reviews )

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