Bhaiksuki alphabet
Bhaiksuki |
|
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Type | |
Languages | Sanskrit |
Time period
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c. 11th–12th century AD [1] |
Parent systems
|
|
Sister systems
|
Sharada Devanagari |
Direction | Left-to-right |
ISO 15924 | Bhks, 334 |
Unicode alias
|
Bhaiksuki |
U+11C00–U+11C6F |
Brahmic scripts |
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The Brahmic script and its descendants |
Northern Brahmic
|
Bhaiksuki (Sanskrit: भैक्षुकी) is a Brahmi-based script that was used around the 11th and 12th centuries CE. It used to be known in English as the "Arrow-Headed Script" or "Point-Headed Script," while an older designation, "Sindhura," had been used in Tibet for at least three centuries.[2] Records showing usage of the script mainly appeared in the present-day states of Bihar and West Bengal in India, and in regions of Bangladesh. Records have also been located in Tibet, Nepal, and Burma.
Extant manuscripts[edit]
The script is found exclusively in Buddhist texts. According to the Unicode proposal, "Only eleven inscriptions and four manuscripts written in this script are known to exist. These are the Bhaiksuki manuscripts of the Abhidharmasamuccayakārikā, Maṇicūḍajātaka, Candrālaṃkāra, and at least one more Buddhist canonical text. The codex of the Abhidharmasamuccayakārikā was once kept in Tibet, but it is now inaccessible and its exact place of preservation is unknown. The fourth codex was discovered in Tibet and was recently shown in a Chinese documentary; however, information about this manuscript is limited."[2]
Sanskrit is the main language written in this script. It is strongly related to the Devanagari and Sharada scripts.
Unicode[edit]
The Bhaiksuki alphabet was added to the Unicode Standard in June, 2016 with the release of version 9.0.
The Unicode block for Bhaiksuki is U+11C0–U+11C6F:
Bhaiksuki[1][2] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) |
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0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+11C0x | 𑰀 | 𑰁 | 𑰂 | 𑰃 | 𑰄 | 𑰅 | 𑰆 | 𑰇 | 𑰈 | 𑰊 | 𑰋 | 𑰌 | 𑰍 | 𑰎 | 𑰏 | |
U+11C1x | 𑰐 | 𑰑 | 𑰒 | 𑰓 | 𑰔 | 𑰕 | 𑰖 | 𑰗 | 𑰘 | 𑰙 | 𑰚 | 𑰛 | 𑰜 | 𑰝 | 𑰞 | 𑰟 |
U+11C2x | 𑰠 | 𑰡 | 𑰢 | 𑰣 | 𑰤 | 𑰥 | 𑰦 | 𑰧 | 𑰨 | 𑰩 | 𑰪 | 𑰫 | 𑰬 | 𑰭 | 𑰮 | 𑰯 |
U+11C3x | 𑰰 | 𑰱 | 𑰲 | 𑰳 | 𑰴 | 𑰵 | 𑰶 | 𑰸 | 𑰹 | 𑰺 | 𑰻 | 𑰼 | 𑰽 | 𑰾 | 𑰿 | |
U+11C4x | 𑱀 | 𑱁 | 𑱂 | 𑱃 | 𑱄 | 𑱅 | ||||||||||
U+11C5x | 𑱐 | 𑱑 | 𑱒 | 𑱓 | 𑱔 | 𑱕 | 𑱖 | 𑱗 | 𑱘 | 𑱙 | 𑱚 | 𑱛 | 𑱜 | 𑱝 | 𑱞 | 𑱟 |
U+11C6x | 𑱠 | 𑱡 | 𑱢 | 𑱣 | 𑱤 | 𑱥 | 𑱦 | 𑱧 | 𑱨 | 𑱩 | 𑱪 | 𑱫 | 𑱬 | |||
Notes |
References[edit]
- ^ James, Ian (2012-04-16). "Bhaiksuki script". Retrieved 2016-06-22.
- ^ a b Pandey, Anshuman; Dimitrov, Dragomir (2014-04-23). "N4573: Final Proposal to Encode the Bhaiksuki Script in ISO/IEC 10646" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-06-22.
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