Linear A ?
Circular Reading by Rotation.= No Wrong Way To Look.
The first picture shows objects that are examples of early writing from Knossos on Crete. The upper left object is a clay label which would have been tied to another object, with an early Cretan "hieroglyphic" script (predecessor to Linear A).
On the upper right is a clay tablet with Linear A script, which has never been translated.
The lower object is a tablet inscribed in the Linear B script. (Scroll down for another Linear B tablet from Pylos. It is from an early archive dating to about 1500 B.C., whose texts deal with allotments of armor, chariots, and horses to different men, probably warriors.
The Linear B text reads from left to right as English does. Here the text begins with syllabic signs which spell the man's name ("Riminios") and then appear signs for a corselet (armor for the torso, with straps over the shoulders), a chariot with a yoke for two horses, and on the far right, a horse's head. These last signs are ideograms, rough sketches of the objects themselves.
Source of images: top, Greek Archaeological Service web site for Knossos;