Information about Avestan Alphabet
| Avestan | ||
|---|---|---|
| Type | Alphabet | |
| Languages | Avestan language, Middle Persian | |
| Time period | 400–1000 CE | |
| Parent systems | Aramaic alphabet → Pahlavi script → Avestan | |
| ISO 15924 | Avst | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
| History of the alphabet |
|---|
Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
|
| Meroitic 3rd c. BC |
| Hangul 1443 |
| Zhuyin 1913 |
| complete genealogy |
The Avestan alphabet is a writing system developed during the Sassanid era (226-651) to render the Avestan language.
As a side effect of its development, the script was also used for Pazend, a method of writing Middle Persian that was used primarily for the Zend commentaries on the texts of the Avesta. In the texts of Zoroastrian tradition, the alphabet is referred to as din dabireh or din dabiri, Middle Persian for "the religion's script."
History
The development of the Avestan alphabet was provoked by the need to correctly represent recited Avestan language texts. The various text collections that today constitute the canon of Zoroastrian scripture are the result of a collation that occurred in the 4th century, probably during the reign of Shapur II (309-379). It is likely that the Avestan alphabet was an ad hoc[1] innovation related to this - "Sassanid archetype" - collation.The enterprise, "which is indicative of a Mazdean revival and of the establishment of a strict orthodoxy closely connected with the political power, was probably caused by the desire to compete more effectively with Buddhists, Christians, and Manicheans, whose faith was based on a revealed book."[1] In contrast, the Zoroastrian priesthood had for centuries been accustomed to memorizing scripture - following by rote the words of a teacher-priest until they had memorized the words, cadence, inflection and intonation of the prayers. This they passed on to their pupils in turn, so preserving for many generations the "correct" way to recite scripture. This was necessary because the priesthood considered (and continue to consider) precise and correct enunciation and cadence a prerequisite of effective prayer. Further, the recitation of the liturgy was (and is) accompanied by ritual activity that leaves no room to attend to a written text.
The ability to correctly render Avestan did however have a direct benefit: By the common era the Avestan language words had almost ceased to be understood, which led to the preparation of the Zend texts (from Avestan zainti "understanding"), that is commentaries on and translations of the canon. The development of the Avestan alphabet allowed these commentaries to interleave quotation of scripture with explanation thereof. The direct effect of these texts was a "standardized" interpretation of scripture that survives to the present day. For scholarship these texts are enormously interesting since they occasionally preserve passages that have otherwise been lost.
The 9th-14th century texts of Zoroastrian tradition suggest that there was once a much larger collection of written Zoroastrian literature, but these texts - if they ever existed - have since been lost, and it is hence not known what script was used to render them. The question of the existence of a pre-Sassanid "Arsacid archetype" occupied Avestan scholars for much of the 19th century, and "[w]hatever may be the truth about the Arsacid Avesta, the linguistic evidence shows that even if it did exist, it can not have had any practical influence, since no linguistic form in the Vulgate can be explained with certainty as resulting from wrong transcription and the number of doubtful cases is minimal; in fact it is being steadily reduced. Though the existence of an Arsacid archetype is not impossible, it has proved to contribute nothing to Avestan philology."[1]
Genealogy & script
The Pahlavi script, upon which the Avestan alphabet is based, was in common use for representing various middle Iranian languages, but was not adequate for representing a religious language that demanded precision since Pahlavi was a simplified abjad syllabary which only contained a handful of consonant characters (most with multiple pronunciations), and left most vowels unexpressed. Pahlavi script had at most 22 characters (the number varied by region and epoch), and as "Book Pahlavi", the most common form of the script, had only twelve letters representing about 24 sounds.In contrast, Avestan was a full alphabet, with explicit characters for vowels, and allowed for phonetic disambiguation of allophones. The alphabet included many characters (a, i, k, t, p, b, m, n, r, s, z, š, xv) from cursive Pahlavi, while some (ā, γ) are characters that only exist in the Psalter Pahlavi variant (in cursive Pahlavi γ and k have the same symbol).[4] Some of the vowels, such as ə appear to derive from Greek miniscules.[4] Avestan o is a special form of Pahlavi l that exists only in Aramaic ideograms. Some letters (e.g. ŋ́, ṇ, ẏ, v), are free inventions.[6]
Avestan script, like Pahlavi script and Aramaic script also, are written from right to left. In Avestan script, letters are not connected, and ligatures (the "standard" ones being sk, šc, št, ša) are "rare and clearly of secondary origin."[4] Fossey[8] lists altogether 16 ligatures, but most are formed by the interaction of swash tails.
Words and the end of the first part of a compound are separated by a dot (point). Beyond that, punctuation is weak or non-existent in the manuscripts, and Geldner (1880) had to devise one for standardized transcription. In his system, which he developed based on what he could find, a triangle of three dots serves as a colon, a semicolon, an end of sentence or end of section: which is which is determined by the size of the dots and whether there is one dot above and two below, or two above and one below. Two above and one below signify - in ascending order of 'dot' size - colon, semicolon, end of sentence or end of section. One above and two below signify 'turned end of sentence' and 'turned end of section'.
Graphemes
In total, the Avestan alphabet has 37 consonants and 16 vowels. There are two main transcription schemes for Avestan, the older style used by Christian Bartholomae, and the newer style used by Karl Hoffmann.
The following list shows the letters as ordered and transcribed by Hoffmann (1996), based on Bartholomae:
- Vowels (16):
- a ā å ā̊ ą ą̇̇ ə ə̄ e ē o ō i ī u ū
- Consonants (37):
- k x x́ xᵛ g ġ γ c j t ϑ d δ t̰ p f b β ŋ ŋ́ ŋᵛ n ń ṇ m m̨ ẏ y w r s z š ž š́ ṣ̌ h
Not represented in the above table are the semi-vocalic glides ii and uu, which in the Bartholomae system are transcribed as y and w. Later, when writing Middle Persian in the script (i.e. Pazend), another consonant was added to it to represent the [l] phoneme that didn't exist in the Avestan languages.
Technical standards
The script has been proposed to be encoded in the Unicode Standard by Michael Everson and Roozbeh Pournader, and was accepted by the Unicode Technical Committee on 2007-02-09, to be included in Unicode 5.1.The accepted Unicode range is U+10B00 through U+10B35 for letters (ii and uu are not represented as single characters) and U+10B38 through U+10B3F for punctuation.[9] Two of the 64 spaces are not used.
References and bibliography
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External links
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An alphabet is a standardized set of letters
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Avestan}}}
Writing system: Avestan alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-1: ae
ISO 639-2: ave
ISO 639-3: ave
Avestan
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Writing system: Avestan alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-1: ae
ISO 639-2: ave
ISO 639-3: ave
Avestan
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Middle Persian}}}
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: pal (see text left)
ISO 639-3: pal
Middle Persian is the Middle Iranian language/ethnolect of Southwestern Iran that during Sassanid times (224-654 CE) became a
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Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: pal (see text left)
ISO 639-3: pal
Middle Persian is the Middle Iranian language/ethnolect of Southwestern Iran that during Sassanid times (224-654 CE) became a
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Aramaic alphabet
Child systems Hebrew
Nabataean
Syriac
Palmyrenean
Mandaic
Brāhmī
Pahlavi
Sogdian
Kharoṣṭhī
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Child systems Hebrew
Nabataean
Syriac
Palmyrenean
Mandaic
Brāhmī
Pahlavi
Sogdian
Kharoṣṭhī
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ISO 15924, Codes for the representation of names of scripts, defines two sets of codes for a number of writing systems (scripts). Each script is given both a four-letter code and a numeric one.
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International Phonetic Alphabet
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IPA for English The
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The International
Phonetic Alphabet
History
Nonstandard symbols
Extended IPA
Naming conventions
IPA for English The
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Unicode is an industry standard allowing computers to consistently represent and manipulate text expressed in any of the world's writing systems. Developed in tandem with the Universal Character Set standard and published in book form as The Unicode Standard
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The history of the alphabet begins in Ancient Egypt, more than a millennium into the history of writing. The first pure alphabet emerged around 2000 BCE to represent the language of Semitic workers in Egypt (see Middle Bronze Age alphabets), and was derived from the
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Middle Bronze Age alphabets are two similar undeciphered scripts, dated to be from the Middle Bronze Age (2000-1500 BCE), and believed to be ancestral to nearly all modern alphabets:
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- the Proto-Sinaitic
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The Ugaritic alphabet is a cuneiform abjad (alphabet without vowels), used from around 1500 BC for the Ugaritic language, an extinct Canaanite language discovered in Ugarit, Syria. It has 31 distinct letters.
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The Ugaritic alphabet is a cuneiform abjad (alphabet without vowels), used from around 1500 BC for the Ugaritic language, an extinct Canaanite language discovered in Ugarit, Syria. It has 31 distinct letters.
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Proto-Canaanite alphabet
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The Proto-Canaanite alphabet is an abjad of twenty-plus acrophonic glyphs, found in Levantine texts of the Late Bronze Age (from ca.
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The Proto-Canaanite alphabet is an abjad of twenty-plus acrophonic glyphs, found in Levantine texts of the Late Bronze Age (from ca.
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Phoenician alphabet
Child systems Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
Aramaic alphabet
Greek alphabet
Many hypothesized others
Sister systems South Arabian alphabet
Unicode range U+10900 to U+1091F
ISO 15924 Phnx
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Child systems Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
Aramaic alphabet
Greek alphabet
Many hypothesized others
Sister systems South Arabian alphabet
Unicode range U+10900 to U+1091F
ISO 15924 Phnx
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Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
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The Paleo-Hebrew alphabet also know as Ktav Ivri is an offshoot of the Phoenician alphabet used to write the Hebrew language from about the 10th century BCE until it began to
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The Paleo-Hebrew alphabet also know as Ktav Ivri is an offshoot of the Phoenician alphabet used to write the Hebrew language from about the 10th century BCE until it began to
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Aramaic alphabet
Child systems Hebrew
Nabataean
Syriac
Palmyrenean
Mandaic
Brāhmī
Pahlavi
Sogdian
Kharoṣṭhī
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Child systems Hebrew
Nabataean
Syriac
Palmyrenean
Mandaic
Brāhmī
Pahlavi
Sogdian
Kharoṣṭhī
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History of the alphabet
Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
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Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
- Ugaritic 15th c. BC
- Proto-Canaanite 14th c. BC
- Phoenician 11th c. BC
- Paleo-Hebrew 10th c.
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Tibetan
ISO 15924 Tibt
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The Tibetan script
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ISO 15924 Tibt
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Khmer
Child systems Thai
Lao
Sister systems Old Mon (Burmese)
ISO 15924 Khmr
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Child systems Thai
Lao
Sister systems Old Mon (Burmese)
ISO 15924 Khmr
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Java
Sister systems Balinese
Batak
Baybayin
Buhid
Hanunó'o
Rejang
Tagbanwa
ISO 15924 Java
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Sister systems Balinese
Batak
Baybayin
Buhid
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Rejang
Tagbanwa
ISO 15924 Java
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This article is mainly about Hebrew letters. For Hebrew diacritical marks, see niqqud (for the vowel points) and cantillation.
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Syriac alphabet
Child systems Sogdian →Orkhon (Turkic)
→Old Hungarian
→Uyghur
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Nabataean
→ Arabic
Georgian (disputed)
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Child systems Sogdian →Orkhon (Turkic)
→Old Hungarian
→Uyghur
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Nabataean
→ Arabic
Georgian (disputed)
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Nabataean
Child systems Arabic alphabet
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The Nabatean alphabet is a consonantal alphabet (abjad) that was used by the Nabateans in the 2nd century BC.
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Child systems Arabic alphabet
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The Nabatean alphabet is a consonantal alphabet (abjad) that was used by the Nabateans in the 2nd century BC.
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Arabic abjad
Unicode range U+0600 to U+06FF
U+0750 to U+077F
U+FB50 to U+FDFF
U+FE70 to U+FEFF
ISO 15924 Arab (#160)
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Unicode range U+0600 to U+06FF
U+0750 to U+077F
U+FB50 to U+FDFF
U+FE70 to U+FEFF
ISO 15924 Arab (#160)
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Greek alphabet
Child systems Gothic
Glagolitic
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Coptic
Old Italic alphabet
Latin alphabet
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Old Italic alphabet
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Old Italic
Child systems Latin alphabet, Runic alphabet
Sister systems Anatolian alphabets
ISO 15924 Ital
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Child systems Latin alphabet, Runic alphabet
Sister systems Anatolian alphabets
ISO 15924 Ital
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Latin alphabet
Child systems Numerous: see Alphabets derived from the Latin
Sister systems Cyrillic
Coptic
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Runic/Futhark
Unicode range See Latin characters in Unicode
ISO 15924 Latn
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Coptic
Armenian
Runic/Futhark
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Runic
Child systems Younger Futhark, Anglo-Saxon Futhorc
ISO 15924 Runr
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The Runic alphabets are a set of related alphabets using letters (known as runes
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Child systems Younger Futhark, Anglo-Saxon Futhorc
ISO 15924 Runr
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Ogham (Old Irish: Ogam) is an Early Medieval alphabet used primarily to represent the "Old Irish" language.
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Ogham (Old Irish: Ogam) is an Early Medieval alphabet used primarily to represent the "Old Irish" language.
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Gothic
ISO 15924 Goth
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The Gothic alphabet is an alphabetic writing system attributed by Philostorgius to Wulfila, used exclusively for writing the ancient Gothic language.
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ISO 15924 Goth
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The Gothic alphabet is an alphabetic writing system attributed by Philostorgius to Wulfila, used exclusively for writing the ancient Gothic language.
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Armenian alphabet
Sister systems Latin
Cyrillic
Coptic
Unicode range U+0530 to U+058F,
U+FB13 to U+FB17
ISO 15924 Armn
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Sister systems Latin
Cyrillic
Coptic
Unicode range U+0530 to U+058F,
U+FB13 to U+FB17
ISO 15924 Armn
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Glagolitic
ISO 15924 Glag
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The Glagolitic alphabet or Glagolitsa is the oldest known Slavic alphabet.
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ISO 15924 Glag
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The Glagolitic alphabet or Glagolitsa is the oldest known Slavic alphabet.
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