Mandaic | |
---|---|
Script type | Alphabet |
Time period | 2nd century AD — present |
Direction | Right-to-left script |
Languages | Classical Mandaic Neo-Mandaic |
Related scripts | |
Parent systems | Phoenician
|
ISO 15924 | |
ISO 15924 | Mand(140),Mandaic, Mandaean |
Unicode | |
Unicode alias | Mandaic |
U+0840–U+085F | |
The Mandaic alphabet is a writing system primarily used to write the Mandaic language. It is thought to have evolved between the second and seventh century CE from either a cursive form of Aramaic (as did Syriac) or from Inscriptional Parthian. [1] [2] The exact roots of the script are difficult to determine. [3] It was developed by members of the Mandaean faith of Lower Mesopotamia to write the Mandaic language for liturgical purposes. [1] Classical Mandaic and its descendant Neo-Mandaic are still in limited use. [1] The script has changed very little over centuries of use. [3] [1]
The Mandaic name for the script is Abagada or Abaga, after the first letters of the alphabet. Rather than the traditional Semitic letter names (aleph, beth, gimel), they are known as a, ba, ga and so on. [4]
It is written from right to left in horizontal lines. It is a cursive script, but not all letters connect within a word. Spaces separate individual words.
During the past few decades, Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki, a Mandaean living in Australia, has digitized many Mandaean texts using typeset Mandaic script. [5]
The Mandaic alphabet contains 22 letters (in the same order as the Aramaic alphabet) and the digraph adu. The alphabet is formally closed by repeating the first letter, a, so that it has a symbolic count of 24 letters: [6] [7]
# | Name [3] | Letter | Joining behavior | Transliteration | IPA [3] | Unicode code point | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Right | Medial | Left | Syriac | Latin [3] | Hebrew [6] | |||||
1, 24 | a | ࡀ | ـࡀ | ܐ | a | א | /a/ | U+0840 HALQA | ||
2 | ba | ࡁ | ـࡁ | ـࡁـ | ࡁـ | ܒ | b | ב | /b/ | U+0841 AB |
3 | ga | ࡂ | ـࡂ | ـࡂـ | ࡂـ | ܓ | g | ג | /ɡ/ | U+0842 AG |
4 | da | ࡃ | ـࡃ | ـࡃـ | ࡃـ | ܕ | d | ד | /d/ | U+0843 AD |
5 | ha | ࡄ | ـࡄ | ـࡄـ | ࡄـ | ܗ | h | ה | /h/ | U+0844 AH |
6 | wa | ࡅ | ـࡅ | ـࡅـ | ࡅـ | ܘ | u | ו | /u, w/ | U+0845 USHENNA |
7 | za | ࡆ | ـࡆ | ܙ | z | ז | /z/ | U+0846 AZ | ||
8 | eh | ࡇ | ـࡇ | ܚ | -ẖ | ח | /χ/ | U+0847 IT | ||
9 | ṭa | ࡈ | ـࡈ | ـࡈـ | ࡈـ | ܛ | ṭ | ט | /tˠ/ | U+0848 ATT |
10 | ya | ࡉ | ـࡉ | ܝ | i | י | /i, j/ | U+0849 AKSA | ||
11 | ka | ࡊ | ـࡊ | ـࡊـ | ࡊـ | ܟ | k | כ | /k/ | U+084A AK |
12 | la | ࡋ | ـࡋ | ـࡋـ | ࡋـ | ܠ | l | ל | /l/ | U+084B AL |
13 | ma | ࡌ | ـࡌ | ـࡌـ | ࡌـ | ܡ | m | מ | /m/ | U+084C AM |
14 | na | ࡍ | ـࡍ | ـࡍـ | ࡍـ | ܢ | n | נ | /n/ | U+084D AN |
15 | sa | ࡎ | ـࡎ | ـࡎـ | ࡎـ | ܣ | s | ס | /s/ | U+084E AS |
16 | e | ࡏ | ـࡏ | ـࡏـ | ࡏـ | ܥ | ʿ | ע | /e/ | U+084F IN |
17 | pa | ࡐ | ـࡐ | ـࡐـ | ࡐـ | ܦ | p | פ | /p/ | U+0850 AP |
18 | ṣa | ࡑ | ـࡑ | ـࡑـ | ࡑـ | ܨ | ṣ | צ | /sˠ/ | U+0851 ASZ |
19 | qa | ࡒ | ـࡒ | ـࡒـ | ࡒـ | ܩ | q | ק | /q/ | U+0852 AQ |
20 | ra | ࡓ | ـࡓ | ـࡓـ | ࡓـ | ܪ | r | ר | /r/ | U+0853 AR |
21 | ša | ࡔ | ـࡔ | ܫ | š | ש | /ʃ/ | U+0854 ASH | ||
22 | ta | ࡕ | ـࡕ | ـࡕـ | ࡕـ | ܬ | t | ת | /t/ | U+0855 AT |
23 | ḏ | ࡖ | ـࡖ | ܯ | ḏ- | דﬞ | /ð/ | U+0856 DUSHENNA |
Unlike most other Semitic alphabets, vowels are usually written out in full. The first letter, a (corresponding to alaph), is used to represent a range of open vowels. The sixth letter, wa, is used for close back vowels (u and o), and the tenth letter, ya is used for close front vowels (i and e). These last two can also serve as the consonants w/v and y. The eighth letter corresponds to the Semitic heth , and is called eh; it is pronounced as a long i-vowel but is used only as a suffix for the third person singular. [7] The sixteenth letter, e (Aramaic ayn ), usually represents e at the beginning of a word or, when followed by wa or ya, represents initial u or i respectively.
A mark similar to an underscore (U+085A◌࡚MANDAIC VOCALIZATION MARK) can be used to distinguish vowel quality for three Mandaic vowels. It is used in teaching materials but may be omitted from ordinary text. [9] It is only used with vowels a, wa, and ya. Using the letter ba as an example:
A dot under a consonant (U+085B◌࡛MANDAIC GEMINATION MARK) can be used to note gemination, indicating what native writers call a "hard" pronunciation. [9] Sample words include ࡀࡊ࡛ࡀ (ekka) 'there is', ࡔࡉࡍ࡛ࡀ (šenna) 'tooth', ࡋࡉࡁ࡛ࡀ (lebba) 'heart', and ࡓࡁ࡛ࡀ (rabba) 'great'. [9]
The 23rd letter of the alphabet is the digraph adu (da + ya), the relative particle [1] [6] (cf. Arabic tāʾ marbūṭah, Coptic letter "ti", and English ampersand).
In addition to normal joining behavior, some Mandaic letters can combine to form various ligatures: [3] [9]
Both adu (U+0856ࡖMANDAIC LETTER DUSHENNA) and the old ligature kḏ (U+0857ࡗMANDAIC LETTER KAD) are treated as single characters in Unicode.
Due to their similar shapes, certain Mandaic characters are sometimes confused with each other by both historical Mandaean scribes and modern scholars, particularly in handwritten manuscripts. These include the following. [10]
Postclassical and modern Mandaic use many Persian words. Various Mandaic letters can be re-purposed by placing two horizontally-aligned dots underneath (U+0859◌࡙MANDAIC AFFRICATION MARK). This idea is comparable to the four novel letters in the Persian alphabet, allowing the alphabet to be used to represent foreign sounds (whether affrication, lenition, or another sound): [9]
Mandaic ayin (ࡘ) is borrowed from Arabic ayin (ع). [1] Unlike in Arabic, Mandaic ayin does not join with other letters. [9]
Punctuation is sparsely used in Mandaic text. [9] A break in text can be indicated by two concentric circles (U+085E࡞MANDAIC PUNCTUATION). [1]
A horizontal low line (U+0640ـARABIC TATWEEL) can be used to justify text. [1]
Each letter of the Mandaic alphabet is said to represent a power of life and light. [7] Mandaeans view their alphabet as magical and sacred. [7] [1]
Acrostic hymns can be found in Mandaic literature, for example in Book 12 of the Right Ginza . [11]
The Semitic alphabet contains 22 letters. In order to bring this number to 24, the number of hours in a day, adu was added and a was repeated as the last letter of the Mandaic alphabet. [4] [7] Without this repetition, the alphabet would be considered incomplete for magical purposes. [4]
The Mandaic alphabet was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 2010 with the release of version 6.0.
The Unicode block for Mandaic is U+0840–U+085F:
Mandaic [1] [2] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+084x | ࡀ | ࡁ | ࡂ | ࡃ | ࡄ | ࡅ | ࡆ | ࡇ | ࡈ | ࡉ | ࡊ | ࡋ | ࡌ | ࡍ | ࡎ | ࡏ |
U+085x | ࡐ | ࡑ | ࡒ | ࡓ | ࡔ | ࡕ | ࡖ | ࡗ | ࡘ | ࡙ | ࡚ | ࡛ | ࡞ | |||
Notes |
The ancient Aramaic alphabet was used to write the Aramaic languages spoken by ancient Aramean pre-Christian tribes throughout the Fertile Crescent. It was also adopted by other peoples as their own alphabet when empires and their subjects underwent linguistic Aramaization during a language shift for governing purposes — a precursor to Arabization centuries later — including among the Assyrians and Babylonians who permanently replaced their Akkadian language and its cuneiform script with Aramaic and its script, and among Jews, but not Samaritans, who adopted the Aramaic language as their vernacular and started using the Aramaic alphabet, which they call "Square Script", even for writing Hebrew, displacing the former Paleo-Hebrew alphabet. The modern Hebrew alphabet derives from the Aramaic alphabet, in contrast to the modern Samaritan alphabet, which derives from Paleo-Hebrew.
The Arabic alphabet, or the Arabic abjad, is the Arabic script as specifically codified for writing the Arabic language. It is written from right-to-left in a cursive style, and includes 28 letters, of which most have contextual letterforms. Unlike the Latin alphabet, the script has no concept of letter case. The Arabic alphabet is considered an abjad, with only consonants required to be written; due to its optional use of diacritics to notate vowels, it is considered an impure abjad.
Aramaic is a Northwest Semitic language that originated in the ancient region of Syria and quickly spread to Mesopotamia, the southern Levant, southeastern Anatolia, Eastern Arabia and the Sinai Peninsula, where it has been continually written and spoken in different varieties for over three thousand years.
The Hebrew alphabet, known variously by scholars as the Ktav Ashuri, Jewish script, square script and block script, is an abjad script used in the writing of the Hebrew language and other Jewish languages, most notably Yiddish, Ladino, Judeo-Arabic, and Judeo-Persian. In modern Hebrew, vowels are increasingly introduced. It is also used informally in Israel to write Levantine Arabic, especially among Druze. It is an offshoot of the Imperial Aramaic alphabet, which flourished during the Achaemenid Empire and which itself derives from the Phoenician alphabet.
A mater lectionis is any consonant that is used to indicate a vowel, primarily in the writing of Semitic languages such as Arabic, Hebrew and Syriac. The letters that do this in Hebrew are aleph א, he ה, waw ו and yod י, with the latter two in particular being more often vowels than they are consonants. In Arabic, the matres lectionis are ʾalif ا, wāw و and yāʾ ي.
The Phoenician alphabet is an abjad used across the Mediterranean civilization of Phoenicia for most of the 1st millennium BC. It was one of the first alphabets, and attested in Canaanite and Aramaic inscriptions found across the Mediterranean region. In the history of writing systems, the Phoenician script also marked the first to have a fixed writing direction—while previous systems were multi-directional, Phoenician was written horizontally, from right to left. It developed directly from the Proto-Sinaitic script used during the Late Bronze Age, which was derived in turn from Egyptian hieroglyphs.
In the polytonic orthography of Ancient Greek, the rough breathing character is a diacritical mark used to indicate the presence of an sound before a vowel, diphthong, or after rho. It remained in the polytonic orthography even after the Hellenistic period, when the sound disappeared from the Greek language. In the monotonic orthography of Modern Greek phonology, in use since 1982, it is not used at all.
The Gupta script was used for writing Sanskrit and is associated with the Gupta Empire of the Indian subcontinent, which was a period of material prosperity and great religious and scientific developments. The Gupta script was descended from Brāhmī and gave rise to the Śāradā and Siddhaṃ scripts. These scripts in turn gave rise to many of the most important Indic scripts, including Devanāgarī, the Gurmukhī script for Punjabi, the Odia script, the Bengali-Assamese script and the Tibetan script.
The Syriac alphabet is a writing system primarily used to write the Syriac language since the 1st century AD. It is one of the Semitic abjads descending from the Aramaic alphabet through the Palmyrene alphabet, and shares similarities with the Phoenician, Hebrew, Arabic and Sogdian, the precursor and a direct ancestor of the traditional Mongolian scripts.
Mandaic, or more specifically Classical Mandaic, is the liturgical language of Mandaeism and a South Eastern Aramaic variety in use by the Mandaean community, traditionally based in southern parts of Iraq and southwest Iran, for their religious books. Mandaic, or Classical Mandaic, is still used by Mandaean priests in liturgical rites. The modern descendant of Mandaic or Classical Mandaic, known as Neo-Mandaic or Modern Mandaic, is spoken by a small group of Mandaeans around Ahvaz and Khorramshahr in the southern Iranian Khuzestan province.
The Sogdian alphabet was originally used for the Sogdian language, a language in the Iranian family used by the people of Sogdia. The alphabet is derived from Syriac, a descendant script of the Aramaic alphabet. The Sogdian alphabet is one of three scripts used to write the Sogdian language, the others being the Manichaean alphabet and the Syriac alphabet. It was used throughout Central Asia, from the edge of Iran in the west, to China in the east, from approximately 100–1200 A.D.
Neo-Mandaic, also known as Modern Mandaic, sometimes called the "ratna", is the modern reflex of the Mandaic language, the liturgical language of the Mandaean religious community of Iraq and Iran. Although severely endangered, it survives today as the first language of a small number of Mandaeans in Iran and in the Mandaean diaspora. All Neo-Mandaic speakers are multilingual in the languages of their neighbors, Arabic and Persian, and the influence of these languages upon the grammar of Neo-Mandaic is considerable, particularly in the lexicon and the morphology of the noun. Nevertheless, Neo-Mandaic is more conservative even in these regards than most other Neo-Aramaic languages.
Ayin is the sixteenth letter of the Semitic scripts, including Arabic ʿaynع, Aramaic ʿē 𐡏, Hebrew ʿayinע, Phoenician ʿayin 𐤏, and Syriac ʿē ܥ.
Aleph is the first letter of the Semitic abjads, including Arabic ʾalifا, Aramaic ʾālap 𐡀, Hebrew ʾālefא, North Arabian 𐪑, Phoenician ʾālep 𐤀, Syriac ʾālap̄ ܐ. It also appears as South Arabian 𐩱 and Ge'ez ʾälef አ.
The history of the alphabet goes back to the consonantal writing system used to write Semitic languages in the Levant during the 2nd millennium BCE. Nearly all alphabetic scripts used throughout the world today ultimately go back to this Semitic script. Its first origins can be traced back to a Proto-Sinaitic script developed in Ancient Egypt to represent the language of Semitic-speaking workers and slaves in Egypt. Unskilled in the complex hieroglyphic system used to write the Egyptian language, which required a large number of pictograms, they selected a small number of those commonly seen in their surroundings to describe the sounds, as opposed to the semantic values, of their own Canaanite language. This script was partly influenced by the older Egyptian hieratic, a cursive script related to Egyptian hieroglyphs. The Semitic alphabet became the ancestor of multiple writing systems across the Middle East, Europe, northern Africa, and South Asia, mainly through Phoenician and the closely related Paleo-Hebrew alphabet, and later Aramaic and the Nabatean—derived from the Aramaic alphabet and developed into the Arabic alphabet—five closely related members of the Semitic family of scripts that were in use during the early first millennium BCE.
In a right-to-left, top-to-bottom script, writing starts from the right of the page and continues to the left, proceeding from top to bottom for new lines. Arabic and Hebrew are the most widespread RTL writing systems in modern times.
Unicode supports several phonetic scripts and notation systems through its existing scripts and the addition of extra blocks with phonetic characters. These phonetic characters are derived from an existing script, usually Latin, Greek or Cyrillic. Apart from the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), extensions to the IPA and obsolete and nonstandard IPA symbols, these blocks also contain characters from the Uralic Phonetic Alphabet and the Americanist Phonetic Alphabet.
The Old Uyghur alphabet was a Turkic script used for writing Old Uyghur, a variety of Old Turkic spoken in Turpan and Gansu that is the ancestor of the modern Western Yugur language. The term "Old Uyghur" used for this alphabet is misleading because Qocho, the Uyghur (Yugur) kingdom created in 843, originally used the Old Turkic alphabet. The Uyghur adopted this "Old Uyghur" script from local inhabitants when they migrated into Turfan after 840. It was an adaptation of the Aramaic alphabet used for texts with Buddhist, Manichaean and Christian content for 700–800 years in Turpan. The last known manuscripts are dated to the 18th century. This was the prototype for the Mongolian and Manchu alphabets. The Old Uyghur alphabet was brought to Mongolia by Tata-tonga.
Rudolf Macúch was a Slovak linguist, naturalized as German after 1974.
Mandaic lead rolls, sometimes also known as Mandaic amulets or sheets, are a specific term for a writing medium containing incantations in the Mandaic script incised onto lead sheets with a pin. Some Mandaic incantations are found on gold and silver sheets. They are rolled up and then inserted into a metal capsule with loops on it to be worn around the neck on a string or necklace.