• MAIN PAGE
  • LATEST NEWS
    • Lost Cities
    • Archaeology's Greatest Finds
    • Underwater Discoveries
    • Greatest Inventions
    • Studies
    • Blog
  • PHILOSOPHY
  • HISTORY
  • RELIGIONS
    • Africa
    • Anatolia
    • Arabian Peninsula
    • Balkan Region
    • China - East Asia
    • Europe
    • Eurasian Steppe
    • Levant
    • Mesopotamia
    • Oceania - SE Asia
    • Pre-Columbian Civilizations of America
    • Iranian Plateau - Central Asia
    • Indus Valley - South Asia
    • Japan
    • The Archaeologist Editor Group
    • Scientific Studies
    • Aegean Prehistory
    • Historical Period
    • Byzantine Middle Ages
    • Predynastic Period
    • Dynastic Period
    • Greco-Roman Egypt
  • Rome
  • PALEONTOLOGY
  • About us
Menu

The Archaeologist

  • MAIN PAGE
  • LATEST NEWS
  • DISCOVERIES
    • Lost Cities
    • Archaeology's Greatest Finds
    • Underwater Discoveries
    • Greatest Inventions
    • Studies
    • Blog
  • PHILOSOPHY
  • HISTORY
  • RELIGIONS
  • World Civilizations
    • Africa
    • Anatolia
    • Arabian Peninsula
    • Balkan Region
    • China - East Asia
    • Europe
    • Eurasian Steppe
    • Levant
    • Mesopotamia
    • Oceania - SE Asia
    • Pre-Columbian Civilizations of America
    • Iranian Plateau - Central Asia
    • Indus Valley - South Asia
    • Japan
    • The Archaeologist Editor Group
    • Scientific Studies
  • GREECE
    • Aegean Prehistory
    • Historical Period
    • Byzantine Middle Ages
  • Egypt
    • Predynastic Period
    • Dynastic Period
    • Greco-Roman Egypt
  • Rome
  • PALEONTOLOGY
  • About us

Why we still can't Crack the Indus Valley Script?

February 10, 2022

The Indus script (also known as the Harappan script) is a corpus of symbols produced by the Indus Valley Civilization. Most inscriptions containing these symbols are extremely short, making it difficult to judge whether or not these symbols constituted a script used to record a language, or even symbolize a writing system. In spite of many attempts, the 'script' has not yet been deciphered, but efforts are ongoing.

There is no known bilingual inscription to help decipher the script, and the script shows no significant changes over time.

But why has no serious researcher deciphered the script?

There is a strong disagreement among linguists and Indologists about the very nature of the script. Indologists claim that the Indus script may not have been linguistic at all, while Asko Parpola, professor emeritus University of Helsinki, Finland, who has been trying to decipher the script since 1968, and others say it was pretty much linguistic and may have belonged to the Dravidian family of languages.

We also don't know which language(s) was spoken in the Indus civilization. Extreme brevity of the Indus texts (average text length is about five signs), absence of bilingual or multilingual texts, and apparent discontinuity in traditions at the decline of the Indus Valley Civilization are also the other problems.

In Indus Valley
← The Very First Alphabet Scripts of Eastern Mediterranean and Europe: Phoenician - Euboean - EtruscanLord's Byron Graffiti in The Temple of Sounio in Greece →
Featured
image_2026-01-22_233711244.png
Jan 22, 2026
The First Metalworkers Who Changed Human Evolution
Jan 22, 2026
Read More →
Jan 22, 2026
image_2026-01-22_233404777.png
Jan 22, 2026
Mystery Cults of the Ancient World
Jan 22, 2026
Read More →
Jan 22, 2026
image_2026-01-22_225510943.png
Jan 22, 2026
The Prehistoric Masters of Boat Building
Jan 22, 2026
Read More →
Jan 22, 2026
image_2026-01-22_222210433.png
Jan 22, 2026
Ancient Hidden Libraries Lost to Time
Jan 22, 2026
Read More →
Jan 22, 2026
image_2026-01-22_221848227.png
Jan 22, 2026
The Oldest Known Jewelry and What It Symbolized
Jan 22, 2026
Read More →
Jan 22, 2026
image_2026-01-22_221719691.png
Jan 22, 2026
Investigate structures built with unique sound properties, possibly for rituals or communication.
Jan 22, 2026
Read More →
Jan 22, 2026
read more

Powered by The archaeologist