The fathers of Linear B Script are Michael Ventris and the Academic John Chadwick.
Michael Ventris
An Englishman, amateur linguist, working as an architect and speaking a lot of languages.
He was born on 12 July 1922 and died on 6 September 1956.
He was the son of an Officer of the British Army. He grew up living in Swiss Schools, during his early school years.
Apart from his mother tongue, English, he spoke Swiss, French, German, Polish, Swedish, Latin and Ancient Greek.
When he was 14 years old, he visited an exhibition about the Minoan Culture and he was guided there by Arthur Evans. This was a point in time when he started being interested in Linear B Script, because he believed that it had a relationship with the Etruscan language.
In 1951, he retired from Architecture and he dealt with the decoding of Linear B. He stopped dealing with Etruscan and he examined a new possibility, that of Greek.
At that time, findings of this Script came to light in Pylos of Messinia. He managed to clarify the phonetics of some symbols and he realized that Linear B is Greek Discourse.
His collaboration with John Chadwick completed the result, according to elements that prove the correctness of the deciphering. Their studies became known and they created a new research field, with a lot of interests about the Minoan and Mycenaean Culture.
In 1954 he participated in an excavating group working on Chios. He easily translated the inscriptions of the findings.
In collaboration with Chadwick , they wrote a book titled Documents in Mycenaean Greek. It is the first complete study about Linear B Script.
As an acclaimed researcher, he accepted invitations to enter the Academic Community as a Professor, but, unfortunately, in 1956 he had a car accident where he lost his life.
His projects and the table of the 67 phonetic values he created, guide the studies and efforts to decode the Ancient texts around the world.
John Chadwick
English Academic, Professor of Classical Literature.
He was born in London on 21 May 1920 and he died on 24 November 1998.
He studied Classical Literature at the University of Cambridge, and after the Second World War, he worked at the University of Oxford.
He belonged to a scientific group of Oxford, for the publication of a Dictionary of Classical Literature.
As he had a mastery of Ancient Greek, he collaborated with Michael Ventris.
The result of this collaboration was the complete understanding and decoding of the Ancient texts.
In 1956, in collaboration with Ventris, their book Documents in Mycenaean Greek was published.
In 1958 he wrote the book titled The Deciphering of Linear B Script.
In 1976 he published The Mycenaean World.
He was declared Ηonorary Professor of the School of Philosophy of the University of Athens for his contribution to the reading of the Ancient texts.
He retired in 1984, but until his death he kept on collaborating with the Academic Community.