• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Rongorongo: The Mysterious Writing Of Easter Island Is Still Undeciphered

July 31, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The distant volcanic island of Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, is filled with unanswered questions – but few are more mysterious than its unique writing system that’s never been deciphered. 

Advertisement

Located around 3,600 kilometers (2,237 miles) off the coast of Chile in eastern Polynesia, Rapa Nui is one of the world’s most remote inhabited islands. It’s best known for its hundreds of giant head-shaped monuments, called moai, carved by the Rapa Nui people in roughly 1100 and 1650 CE.

Europeans arrived on the island in the 18th century, bringing a host of problems including disease, murder, and slave traders. The situation worsened through the 19th century and a fatal blow was dealt around the 1860s when around 1,500 islanders were abducted to work as slaves in Peru, decimating the population. 

By the end of the century, most of its traditional culture was irretrievably lost, including an organized system of glyph symbols called Rongorongo that was intricately carved on wooden tablets.

Around 1864, in the midst of this carnage, outsiders had noticed evidence of the writing system and missionaries began sending it aboard. Today, just 27 wooden objects inscribed with Rongorongo exist (none of which remain on the island of Rapa Nui). 

A replica of a Rongorongo Tablet at the Father Sebastian Englert Anthropological Museum in the town of Hanga Roa on Rapa Nui

A replica of a Rongorongo Tablet at the Father Sebastian Englert Anthropological Museum in the town of Hanga Roa on Rapa Nui

Many were sent to Europe, where scholars attempted to crack the Easter Island code – but all of these attempts have fallen flat.

Advertisement

One of the most respected attempts came in the 1950s by Thomas Barthel, an ethnologist from the University of Tübingen in Germany, who identified 599 sign shapes, although many contemporary scholars believe this “cannot be considered definitive.”

Nevertheless, it is clear that Rongorongo has no apparent relation to any other known system of writing and may have developed in complete isolation from other cultures. Although unique, it does chime into certain characteristics that are employed in many other human writing systems – so, no, it wasn’t aliens that brought Rongorongo to Rapa Nui.

“The shapes of the signs do not resemble any known script, and thus they appear to have been invented from zero,” reads a 2022 study by a team of Italian linguists.

“Whatever the status of its creation, Rongorongo shares a characteristic common to all image-based invented scripts, namely that its signs are highly iconic: their shapes depict real or fictional things, including human figurations and body parts, animals, plants, tools and other human-made objects, heavenly bodies, etc,” it states. 

Advertisement

In other words, it’s believed many of the glyphs are direct representations of objects, including people, turtles, fish, and trees. This is why many researchers prefer to call Rongorongo an example of “proto-writing,” in contrast to “true writing systems,” although the distinction between these categories isn’t black-and-white.

Rongorongo inscriptions on a copy of the tablet called Mu'a Au Mingo Ata'i Hoa Au.

Rongorongo inscriptions on a copy of the tablet called Mu’a Au Mingo Ata’i Hoa Au.

Rongorongo remains undeciphered by the modern world, but there are ongoing attempts to better understand it. In February 2024, researchers published a study that applied new radiocarbon dating to four wooden tablets engraved with the glyphs. 

One of the tablets was made from a tree that was felled between 1493 and 1509, predating the arrival of foreigners on the island by at least 200 years and further affirming the view that the Rongorongo script may have been developed in isolation.

Strangely, the old tablet was found to have been made from a tree species that does not grow on Easter Island, Podocarpus latifolia, which is native to southeastern Africa. How, then, did the wood end up over half the world away in the southeastern Pacific? 

Advertisement

Podocarpus is a highly prized wood that has been widely used for shipbuilding in Europe since Medieval times. As such, the researchers argue that the Rongorongo tablet may have originated as the mast of a European ship. Perhaps the ship sunk, creating driftwood that washed ashore on Rapa Nui after decades or centuries of traveling across the world’s oceans.

Like a grim foretelling of the island’s future, Europeans would later arrive in person and retrieve the wooden relic, dooming the Rongorongo script into obscurity. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Pakistan minister says threat to NZ cricket team originated in India
  2. German SPD says talks with kingmakers will not start this week
  3. Who Holds The Title Of The Longest-Surviving Civilization?
  4. Breakthrough Could Make Electric Cars Go 1,000 Kilometers On One Charge

Source Link: Rongorongo: The Mysterious Writing Of Easter Island Is Still Undeciphered

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Nimbus COVID Variant Present In The UK, Infections Could Spread This Summer
  • Scientists Have Finally Measured How Fast Quantum Entanglement Happens
  • Why Earth’s Magnetic Pole Reversals Are So Fascinating
  • World First Artificial Solar Eclipse Created, The “Closest Thing” To HIV Vaccine Gets FDA Approval, And Much More This Week
  • “Remarkable” Pattern Discovered Behind Prime Numbers, Math’s Most Unpredictable Objects
  • People Are Only Just Learning What The World’s Most Expensive Cheese Is Made Of
  • The Physics Behind Iron: Why It’s The Most Stable Element
  • What Is The Reason Some People Keep Waking Up At 3am Every Night?
  • Michigan Bear Finally Free After 2 Years With Plastic Lid Stuck Around Its Neck
  • Pangolins, The World’s Most Trafficked Mammal, May Soon Get Federal Protection In The US
  • Sharks Have No Bones, So How Do They Get So Big?
  • 2025 Is Shaping Up To Be A Whirlwind Year For Tornadoes In The US
  • Unexpected Nova Just Appeared In The Night Sky – And You Can See It With The Naked Eye
  • Watch As Maori Octopus Decides Eating A Ray Is A Good Idea
  • There Is Life Hiding In The Earth’s Deep Biosphere, But Not As You Know It
  • Two Sandhill Cranes Have Adopted A Canada Gosling, And It’s Ridiculously Adorable
  • Hybrid Pythons Are Taking Over The Florida Everglades With “Hybrid Vigor”
  • Mysterious, Powerful Radio Pulse Traced Back To NASA Satellite That’s Been Dead Since 1967
  • This Is The Best (And Worst) Sleep Position
  • Artificial Eclipse, Dancing Dinosaurs, And 50 Years Of “JAWS”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version