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Carian

Carian inscriptions on limestone stela

Script details

See all script details: code, region, status and more
Code Cari
Script type alphabet
Region Middle Eastern
Status Historical
Direction LTR
Baseline bottom
Case no
White space none
Complex behaviors
OpenType code cari
ISO 15924 Numeric Code / Key 201 (left-to-right alphabetic)

Explanation of script details

Script description

The Carian script was used between the 7th and 1st centuries BC in what is now the Aegean region of Turkey, for writing the Carian language.

Read the full description…It was also used in the Nile delta, where Carians were fighting for the Egyptian pharoahs.

The script was an alphabet comprising forty-five letters. Of these, phonetic values have been assigned to nine vowels and seventeen consonants. There is some speculation as to what sounds the remaining nineteen letters represented. Visually, the letters bear a close resemblance to Greek letters. Decipherment was initially attempted on the assumption that those letters which looked like Greek represented the same sounds as their closest visual Greek equivalents. However it has since been established that the phonetic values of the two scripts are very different. For example the theta θ symbol represents ‘th’ in Greek but ‘q’ in Carian.

Carian was generally written from left to right, although Egyptian writers wrote primarily from right to left. It was written without spaces between words.

Languages that use this script

LanguageWriting System
Code
Writing System
Status
SLDR/CLDR
locale
Regional
variants
Carianxcr-Cariin use xcr-Cari-TR (Turkey)

Unicode status

In The Unicode Standard, Carian script implementation is discussed in Chapter 8 Europe-II — Ancient and Other Scripts.

Resources