<bron88.htm>     [Bronze Age
Text]
 
| (CLICK to Enlarge)             The
  Algonquian syllabary, used today mainly by the Cree tribe in Canada and
  employed in newspapers, magazines, and church books, such as the Bible,
  hymnals and prayer books.  It has long
  been thought that this script was the invention of a missionary, James Evans,
  in 1841.  In reality, as inscriptions
  from pre-Roman Spain and also on the Peterborough site in Ontario, Canada
  show, the script is of very ancient origin and is due to the Basques.  Barry Fell deciphered the Basque
  inscriptions in Spain and Portugal in 1979 with the aid of the Algonquian
  syllabary.  The eminent scholar Imanol
  Agiŕe has confirmed the decipherments.   |