Crete: Faist disk

5 03. 04. 2023
6th international conference of exopolitics, history and spirituality

The Faist disk is a disc of burnt clay originating from the Mojo Palace in Faisto, Crete. It dates back to the mid or late Bronze Age of Minoan (2, Millennium BC). It has a diameter of about 15 cm, and it is covered on a spiral with impressed characters on both sides. Its purpose and significance as well as its original production site are not known. However, this is a unique archaeological find. Today it is exhibited at the Archaeological Museum in Iraklio, Crete.

This disk was discovered in 1908 by the Italian archaeologist Luigi Pernier in a palace in Faist on the south coast of Crete. A total of 241 marks consisting of 45 unique symbols are printed on it.… Some of them were compared with the characters of linear font A. These marks were apparently printed using pre-formed hieroglyphic seals in soft clay in a spiral sequence clockwise towards the center of the disc.

The Faist disc became the focus of many amateur and professional archeologists and many attempts were made to decrypt the meaning of the printed brands. Although it is not sure whether it really is a font, most attempts to decrypt it supposed it does. Researchers trying to decipher most often believed these signs to be syllables, alphabets, or logos. It is generally assumed that their attempts at decryption do not have a chance of success until further discoveries with these brands are discovered. Also, there is agreement among the experts that any text on the disk does not provide enough context for analysis that would lead to the understanding of its meaning.

Although this disc is generally considered to be a real historical subject, the discovery has also been made that it is a rampage or mystification.

Or, if it can't be broken, it has to be demonized. And if we accidentally decipher it and learn that they are telling us something that does not fit in with the generally accepted idea of ​​history, then it is fake unambiguously. :)

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