English This preprint presents a revised linguistic analysis of the Linear A inscription CRZf1, engraved on a golden hairpin from Late Minoan Crete (GORILA IV, pl. 146). The inscription is interpreted within the framework of the archaic Indo-European “speaking object” tradition, in which the object itself is directly addressed through a second-person verbal form. The opening sequence A-MA-WA-SI is analysed as “By my hand you are artfully woven”, consisting of an instrumental pronominal element A-MA (“by me / through my hand”) and the finite verbal form WA-SI. The verbal root WA is connected with the archaic Indo-European root *u̯eH- / u̯ā- (“to wind, weave, plait, twist”), reflected for example in Latin viere and Lithuanian vỳti. This interpretation corresponds closely to the technological reality of the object itself, which is manufactured from finely twisted gold wire. Particular attention is given to the forms KA-NI-JA-MI and I-JA. KA-NI-JA-MI is interpreted as a dative-possessive construction comparable to the later Balkan dativus possessivus (“for my girl”), while I-JA functions as a proximal deictic-relational element meaning “this here present” or “this very one”. Together, these forms preserve highly archaic Indo-European pronominal and deictic structures. QA-KI-SE-NU-TI is interpreted as “bridal gift” or “engagement gift”, while A-TA-DE functions as a final dedicatory expression meaning “for solemn dedication” or “as a dedicatory offering”. The resulting grammatical profile aligns most closely with a pre-Balkan Indo-European dialect continuum preserving archaic verbal, pronominal, and deictic structures later reflected in Baltic, Slavic, Anatolian, and Balkan Indo-European traditions. CRZf1 is therefore significant not only as a proposed decipherment, but also as evidence for an archaic Indo-European ritual-poetic register. License image rights remain with the respective holders. In this version the figure is replaced by a Unicode rendering. How to cite Schümann, Michael (2026). The Inscription of the Golden Hairpin CRZf1 in Linear A . Preprint v1.2. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17145125 Keywords Linear A, Cretan language (Linear A), Aegean epigraphy, Bronze Age Crete, gold hairpin inscription, dedicatory inscriptions, speaking object tradition, ritual language, ritual-poetic register, Indo-European linguistics, pre-Balkan Indo-European, Balkan Indo-European, Baltic linguistics, Anatolian linguistics, comparative linguistics, historical linguistics, Indo-European morphology, verbal morphology, deictic systems, dative possessive constructions, dativus possessivus, enclitic pronouns, Indo-European deixis, Indo-European poetics, Bronze Age ritual, Aegean scripts, Linear A palaeography, Mycenaean Greek, Linear B, language contact, Indo-European superstrate, non-Indo-European substrate, Bronze Age religion, Cretan ritual traditions Contact Michael Schümann — m.schuemann@web.de
Michael Schuemann (Wed,) studied this question.