A Hungarian scholar and author of several books, Wilhelm or Guillaume de Hevesy[?], in 1932 called attention to the apparent similarities between some of the rongo-rongo characters of Easter Island and a script from the Indus Valley Civilisation, collating dozens (at least 40) of them with the corresponding signs of the prehistoric script on seals from Mohenjo-daro. This comparison was re-published in later books, for example by Z.A. Simon[?] (1984: 95). The rongo-rongo may mean peace-peace, and their texts may record peace treaty documents, possibly between the long ears and the conquering short ears.
It has also been suggested that rongo-rongo is not a writing system proper but is a genealogical record[?], a calendar, a mnemonic system[?] or a choreography.
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