The Manichaean script is an
abjad-based writing system rooted in the Semitic family of alphabets and associated with the spread of
Manichaeism from southwest to central Asia and beyond, beginning in the 3rd century CE. It bears a sibling relationship to early forms of the
Pahlavi script, both systems having developed from the
Imperial Aramaic alphabet, in which the
Achaemenid court rendered its particular, official dialect of the
Aramaic language
The Aramaic languages, short Aramaic ( syc, ܐܪܡܝܐ, Arāmāyā; oar, 𐤀𐤓𐤌𐤉𐤀; arc, 𐡀𐡓𐡌𐡉𐡀; tmr, אֲרָמִית), are a language family containing many varieties (languages and dialects) that originated in ...
. Unlike Pahlavi, Manichaean script reveals influences from
Sogdian 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.
Middle Persian is written with this alphabet.
The
Iranologist Desmond Durkin-Meisterernst notes that the Manichaean script was mainly used to write numerous
Middle Iranian languages (Manichaean Middle Persian,
Parthian,
Sogdian, Early New Persian,
Bactrian), and
Old Uyghur
Old Uyghur () was a Turkic language which was spoken in Qocho from the 9th–14th centuries and in Gansu.
History
The Old Uyghur language evolved from Old Turkic after the Uyghur Khaganate broke up and remnants of it migrated to Turfan, Qomu ...
(a Turkic language). The Manichaean script is closely related to the
Palmyrene script of Aramaic and the
Estrangelo script of
Syriac.
Nomenclature
The term "Manichean" was introduced as designation for the script by the German scholar
Friedrich W. K. Müller, because of the use of the script in Manichean texts. Müller was the first scholar in modern times (in 1903/4) to read the script.
Overview
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:
*
Sogdian — the dialect of
Sogdia
Sogdia (Sogdian language, Sogdian: ) or Sogdiana was an ancient Iranian peoples, Iranian civilization between the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya, and in present-day Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. Sogdiana was also ...
in the east, which had a large Manichean population.
*
Parthian — the dialect of
Parthia in the northeast, which is indistinguishable from Medean of the northwest.
*
Middle Persian — the dialect of
Pars
Pars may refer to:
* Fars Province of Iran, also known as Pars Province
* Pars (Sasanian province), a province roughly corresponding to the present-day Fars, 224–651
* ''Pars'', for ''Persia'' or ''Iran'', in the Persian language
* Pars News A ...
(
Persis, or Persia proper) in southwest
Iran.
The Manichaean system does not have a high incidence of
Semitic
Semitic most commonly refers to the Semitic languages, a name used since the 1770s to refer to the language family currently present in West Asia, North and East Africa, and Malta.
Semitic may also refer to:
Religions
* Abrahamic religions
** ...
language
logograms and
ideograms inherited from chancellery
Imperial Aramaic that are an essential characteristic of the Pahlavi system. Besides that, Manichaean spelling was less conservative or historical and corresponded closer to contemporary pronunciation: e.g. a word such as ''āzād'' "noble, free" was written ''ʼčʼt'' in Pahlavi, but ''ʼʼzʼd'' in Manichaean Middle Persian of the same period.
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 the
Sogdian alphabet ("Uighur script"). Likewise, outside Manichaeism, the dialect of Parsa (Persia proper) was also recorded in other systems, including Pahlavi scripts (in which case it is known as "Pahlevi" or
Zoroastrian Middle Persian) and
Avestan alphabet (in which case it is known as
Pazend).
As Manichaeism was persecuted around
Mesopotamia and the regions of the
Sasanian Empire
The Sasanian () or Sassanid Empire, officially known as the Empire of Iranians (, ) and also referred to by historians as the Neo-Persian Empire, was the History of Iran, last Iranian empire before the early Muslim conquests of the 7th-8th cen ...
, its origins, it became well-established in Central Asia and along the
Silk Road
The Silk Road () was a network of Eurasian trade routes active from the second century BCE until the mid-15th century. Spanning over 6,400 kilometers (4,000 miles), it played a central role in facilitating economic, cultural, political, and reli ...
. It became an official state religion among the Uyghurs for five centuries (from the 8th through the 12th century), and thus many surviving manuscripts are found in the
Turpan region in the Iranian languages aforementioned, the
Old Uyghur language, and the
Tocharian languages.
In the 19th century, German expeditions discovered a number of Manichaean manuscripts at
Bulayiq on the Silk Road near Turpan in what is now
Xinjiang. Many of these manuscripts are today preserved in Berlin.
Characters
Like most abjads, Manichaean is written from right to left and lacks vowels. Particularly, it has certain consonants that join on both sides, some that join only on the right, and some that only join on the left, and some that do not join at all, unlike the most well-known abjad, Arabic, which has only consonants that join on both sides or on the right. Manichaean has a separate sign for the conjunction "ud" (and); two dots are placed above characters to indicate abbreviations, and there are several punctuation-marks to indicate headlines, page-divisions, sentence-divisions, and others.
There are obligatory conjuncts for certain combinations involving "n" and "y." The numbers are built from units of 1, 5, 10, 20 and 100 and can be visually identifiable. There are also some alternate forms of certain characters.
Unicode
The Manichaean alphabet (U+10AC0–U+10AFF) was added to the
Unicode Standard in June 2014 with the release of version 7.0.
References
Sources
*
Further reading
*
*
Photos of the original texts written in manichaean script discovered at Turpan(Under the link "Texte in manichäischer Schrift")
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Manichaean Script
Obsolete writing systems
Abjad writing systems
Manichaeism
Persian scripts
Right-to-left writing systems