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Dives Akuru

From Wikipedia. See 'Use & History' tab for more informati.

Script details

See all script details: code, region, status and more
Code Diak
Script type abugida
Region Indic
Status Historical
Direction LTR
Baseline unspecified
Case no
White space unspecified
Complex behaviors diacritics, split graphs, required ligatures
OpenType code diak
ISO 15924 Numeric Code / Key 342 (alphasyllabic)

Explanation of script details

Script description

Dives Akuru (literally “island letters”) was used for writing the Maldivian language prior to the adoption of the Thaana script for this purpose.

Read the full description…Dives Akuru descended from the southern Brahmi family of scripts. The development of the script can be divided into three periods. Initially it was very similar to the Grantha script from which it was derived, then, around the 12th century, it developed into what is known as Evela Akuru, which is essentially an archaic form of Dives Akuru. The script in its latest form developed around the 14th century, and was widely used until the early 18th century, when it began to be supplanted by the Thaana script. The two scripts were used synchronously for some time, but by the early 19th century Dives Akuru had all but died out, with only a few atolls (groups of islands) in the south of the country reportedly using it as late as the early 1900s. The two scripts are genetically unrelated and bear very little resemblance to each other, aside from the shapes of a few Thaana characters which appear to have been based on Dives Akuru characters.

Dives Akuru is written from left to right. As would be expected given its derivation from Brahmi, it is an abugida, with each consonant letter representing a syllable containing an inherent vowel. This vowel can be changed by the addition of a vowel diacritic. The script includes 27 consonant letters; 10 independent vowel letters (for writing vowels that are not preceded by a consonant); 10 vowel diacritics; digits from 0-9; and 4 other diacritics: the virama, the candrabindu, a prenasalisation marker, and a gemination marker. Somewhat unusually, the virama sign has been extended to serve a number of other functions as well as its regular vowel-cancellation role. There are five contexts in which the virama is used to mark other phonological—or even semantic—processes; in these contexts the virama fulfills the same functions as the sukun character in Thaana orthography.

Languages that use this script

LanguageWriting System
Code
Writing System
Status
SLDR/CLDR
locale
Regional
variants
Maldiviandv-Diakobsolete dv-Diak-MV (Maldives)

Unicode status

In The Unicode Standard, Dives Akuru script implementation is discussed in Chapter 15: South and Central Asia-IV — Other Historic Scripts.

Resources