Gareth Alun Owens is a British-Greek academic, currently serving as Associate Director and «Erasmus/Socrates» Manager/Tutor of the International Relations Office The Text Encoding Initiative of Crete and as Associate Professor of Hellenic Culture -- History, Language and Civilization.
Education
Owens read Classics at University College London, completing a master"s thesis on Linear B and a thesis on the problem of for his Doctor of Philosophy in archaeology. He has earned the Modern Greek Diploma of Proficiency from the National and Capodistrian University of Athens where he took a second Doctor of Philosophy in linguistics.
Career
He is notable for his contributions to Linear B studies and for his attempts to coordinate the efforts of academics to decipher
He has taught at London and at the University of Crete and has authored several publications in both English and modern Greek. Owens is married to a Greek archaeologist with whom he frequently collaborates. Owens applied for and was granted citizenship.
In fulfilling his obligations as a male Greek citizen, Owens briefly served in the Hellenic Army.
In addition to his academic postings, Owens has worked as a translator for the British Broadcasting Corporation and taught English on Crete. Recently, Owens served as the professor for the Sigma Phi Epsilon 2010 Tragos Quest and taught Greek literature and history to 16 of the fraternity"s top leaders.
Owens postulates that the phonetic values of ninety-percent of characters correspond to those of Linear B figures of similar appearance. A full ten characters do not admit analysis in terms of Linear B, and Owens can only speculate about their meaning.
Using his system of correspondences, Owens has uncovered several place names which appear in the Linear B tablets and figure prominently in the archaeological history of Crete.
In addition, he believes that he has found evidence of grammatical gender for nouns and nomen agentis, as well as vocabulary and noun and verb endings that to him indicate the underlying "Minoan" language of the tablets to be an Indo-European language of the Satem branch. Owens has founded the Daedalic Theme Network to foster collaboration on decipherment and other Minoan issues.