- Manichaean script
Infobox Writing system
name=Manichaean script
type=Abjad
time=3rd – c. 10th CE
languages=Manichaean Middle Iranian
fam1=Proto-Canaanite alphabet
fam2=Phoenician alphabet
fam3=Aramaic alphabet
fam4=Syriac alphabet
fam5=Sogdian alphabet
iso15924=ManiManichaean script is a sibling of an early form of
Pahlavi script , and like Pahlavi is a development from Imperial Aramaic, the official language and script of theAchaemenid court. Unlike Pahlavi, Manichaean script reveals influences fromSogdian script , which in turn descends from the Syriac branch of Aramaic. Manichaean script is so named because Manichaean texts attribute its design to Mani himself.Older Manichaean texts appear in a script and language that is still identifiable as Syriac-Aramaic and these compositions are then classified as Syriac/Aramaic texts. Later texts using Manichaean script are attested in the literature of three Middle Iranian language ethnolects:
* the dialect ofSogdiana in the east, which had a large Manichean population.
* the dialect ofParthia in the northeast, which is indistinguishable from Medean of the northwest.
* the dialect of Parsa (Persia proper) in southwest Iran, formerly and properly known as "Parsi".The Manichaean system does not have a high incidence of Semitic language
logograms andideograms that are an essential characteristic of the Pahlavi system. Moreover, because Manichaean scribes considered the script a sacred instrument, it was protected from the evolution that Pahlavi script underwent, and is hence more archaic than Book Pahlavi.Manichaean script was not the only script used to render Manichaean manuscripts. When writing in Sogdian, which was frequently the case, Manichaean scribes frequently used
Sogdian script ("Uighur script"). Likewise, outside Manichaeism, the dialect of Parsa (Persia proper) was also recorded in other systems, includingPahlavi script (in which case it is known asPahlavi ) andAvestan script (in which case it is known as Pazend).In 19th century, German expeditions discovered a number of Manichaean manuscripts at Bulayiq on the
Silk Road , nearTurfan in north-west China. Many of these manuscripts are today preserved in Berlin.Further reading
*cite encyclopedia|article=Manichean script|last=Durkin-Meisterernst|first=Desmond|date=October 14, 2005|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica|url=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/ot_grp9/ot_maniscrt_20051018.html
*http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/features/silkroad/parthianlge.html
*http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/features/silkroad/manichaeanlge.html
* [http://std.dkuug.dk/jtc1/sc2/wg2/docs/n2544.pdf Proposal to encode the Manichaean script in the UCS] Project for computer fonts.
* [http://www.bbaw.de/forschung/turfanforschung/dta/index.html Photos of the original texts written in manichaean script discovered at Turfan] (Under the link "Texte in manichäischer Schrift")
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