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Abstract
In the long history of rongorongo investigation two “grand old men” have stood above all others: in the nineteenth century the French Bishop of Tahiti Tepano Jaussen, and in the twentieth century the German Professor of Ethnology Thomas S. Barthel (Fig. 20). If Jaussen will loom in the annals of rongorongo because of his informant work with Metoro and his “Jaussen List” of rongorongo glyphs, then Barthel will always be remembered primarily for his Grundlagen (r958a), the “Rudiments”, the single most important publication on Easter Island’s script-with its corpus of original rongorongo texts, numerical transcriptions, structural text analyses, morphological sign studies, and complete sign catalogue. Compared with nearly all other rongorongo scholars, Barthel is uncommonly precise and reliable in his scholarship. In the international rongorongo research of the post-war period he stood without peers.
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