8 April 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

Archaeologists Discovered a Fragmentary Inscription in Cypriot Syllabary Found Dating to the Cypro-Archaic Period

During excavations at Palaepaphos, located within the municipal boundaries of the modern village of Kouklia-Martsello on the southwest coast of Cyprus, archaeologists have discovered an ancient inscription in the Cypriot syllabary.

After the kingdom’s capital was moved to Nea Paphos, about 15 kilometers to the west, in the fourth century BC, the city came to be known as Palaepaphos. The location served as the seat of the city-kingdom of Paphos during the Iron Age and as the urban and administrative hub of the regional polity during the Late Bronze Age.

The inscription was carved onto a wall that dates back to the Cypro-Archaic period between 750 and 480 B.C. The discovery has generated a lot of interest and anticipation for more information from the inscription’s analysis.

The Cypriot syllabary is believed to have evolved from Linear A and was used in Cyprus between 1500 and 300 BC. The earliest inscriptions, which date from between 1500 and 1200 BC, are written in a script known as Cypro-Minoan and are in an unidentified language known as “Eteo-Cypriot” or “True Cypriot.” As a result of Alexander the Great’s programme of Hellinization the Cypriot script was eventually replaced by the Greek alphabet during the 4th century BC.

The site has been previously investigated by British archaeologists (1950-55) and a German-Swiss archaeological mission (1966-73, 1985, 1992-95), as well as more recently by the University of Cyprus (2006-08).



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



Palaepaphos. Image Credit: Department of Antiquities of Cyprus

Earlier research uncovered part of a monumental wall spanning 168 meters, though its excavation remained incomplete. However, the dating and purpose of the wall remain unresolved.

The 2024 excavation concentrated on a monument located north of an impressive P-shaped wall at the site, oriented towards the sea. Initially believed to be part of a fortification serving as a defensive tower, recent excavations suggest the structure is likely separate and of a devotional nature.

New findings suggest the structure was built during the 12th and 11th centuries BCE and was abandoned during the Cypro-Geometric period between 1050 and 750 BCE. Researchers think the structure was repaired during the Cypro-Archaic period in the 6th century BCE.

In 2023, two ship engravings were discovered on the exterior of this structure, similar to vessel depictions found at Kition. In 2024, an additional, incomplete ship engraving was discovered.

During the 2024 excavation season, the focus was on exploring a tunnel cutting through the wall at a depth of 2.3 meters. The function of these tunnels remains enigmatic, though one hypothesis posits they were constructed around 499/498 BC during the Persian siege of Palaepaphos. The careful excavation provided a better understanding of the stratigraphy and dating of the wall’s later phases.

The NKUA research is being conducted in close cooperation with the University of Cyprus’ Palaipaphos Urban Landscape Project, directed by Professor Maria Lakovou. The fifth annual NKUA mission is scheduled for 2025.

Cover Image Credit: Department of Antiquities of Cyprus / Archaeological Research Unit UCY.

Related Articles

The Ancestors of Today’s Barbie Dolls “Coptic dolls”

23 September 2023

23 September 2023

For as long as there has been civilization, children have played with dolls. Wooden dolls with bead hair have been...

Staging of religion on rock paintings that are thousands of years old in southern Egypt desert

10 May 2023

10 May 2023

Egyptologists at the University of Bonn and the University of Aswan want to systematically record hundreds of petroglyphs and inscriptions...

Mystery of the 1,700-year-old Mosaic Solved: The Medallion in the Mosaic uncovered to be the Symbol of a Roman Military Unit

10 August 2024

10 August 2024

The mystery of the 1,700-year-old mosaic, which was found during excavations in Amasya province in northern Turkey 11 years ago...

Unique finds unearthed in the ancient city of Olba in southern Türkiye

16 August 2023

16 August 2023

In the excavations carried out in the ancient city of Olba, located in the Silifke district of Mersin, in the...

Archaeologists unearth 600,000-year-old evidence of Britain’s early inhabitants

22 June 2022

22 June 2022

New finds have indicated that some of Britain’s earliest people lived in the Canterbury suburbs. According to the research, led...

A 2600-year-old Clay Pot was Repurposed As Trash Bin in An Iranian Museum

13 November 2023

13 November 2023

A clay pot dating back to the 2600-year-old Medes period is now serving as a trash bin in a museum...

Oldest Known Tiger Figurine Unearthed in Northern Iran — 5,000 Years Old

21 October 2025

21 October 2025

Archaeologists have identified what may be the world’s oldest depiction of a tiger — a 5,000-year-old ceramic figurine excavated at...

Urartian-Era Fortress with 50 Rooms Discovered at 3,000 Meters in Eastern Türkiye

5 August 2025

5 August 2025

Archaeologists uncover a massive high-altitude fortress believed to date back to the Iron Age, with ties to the ancient Urartian...

A Rare Glass Jewel Depicting the Crucifixion Found in an Abandoned Anglo-Saxon Village

18 January 2026

18 January 2026

Archaeological investigations ahead of the Sizewell C nuclear power station project in Suffolk have revealed a remarkable discovery: a rare...

2100-year-old women skeleton found lying in bronze ‘Mermaid Bed’

4 June 2022

4 June 2022

Archaeologists have discovered the 2100-year-old skeleton of a woman lying in a bronze ‘Mermaid Bed’ near the city of Kozani...

Archaeologists discover a 4,000-year-old ancient city in the Iraqi Dhi Qar region

20 July 2021

20 July 2021

An astonishing find was made by archaeologists in Iraq‘s Dhi Qar province, where an ancient settlement estimated to be 4,000...

Archaeologists Discover Rare 3,800-Year-Old Clay Figurine of Frogs at Peru’s Vichama Site

31 August 2025

31 August 2025

Archaeologists in Peru have announced a remarkable discovery: a 3,800-year-old Clay figurine depicting two frogs, unearthed at the Vichama archaeological...

Viking Sea Power May Have Emerged in the 3rd Century, During the Roman Era

23 February 2026

23 February 2026

For generations, the Viking Age has been framed as beginning in the late 8th century, marked by the raid on...

Amateur makes ‘Gold Find of the Century’ in Norway

7 September 2023

7 September 2023

A Norwegian 51-year-old Erlend Bore out walking on doctors’ advice unearthed rare 6th-century gold jewellery using a newly bought metal...

Unearthed in Perthshire: GUARD Archaeologists Discover Hidden Iron Age Settlement

1 November 2025

1 November 2025

A vanished community that once thrived on a windswept hilltop near Perth, Scotland, has resurfaced after lying buried for over...