Leke

Script details
See all script details: code, region, status and more
Code | Leke |
Script type | unspecified |
Region | Mainland Southeast Asian |
Status | Current |
Direction | LTR |
Baseline | bottom |
Case | unknown |
White space | unspecified |
Complex behaviors | diacritics |
OpenType code | unspecified |
ISO 15924 Numeric Code / Key | 364 (alphasyllabic) |
Script description
The Leke are a messianic Buddhist sect established in 1860, who live in villages in Myanmar in the Megatha Forest complex, on either side of the border around Three Pagodas Pass, and in the Gwe Ka Baw (Zwe Kabin) area, near Pa’an.
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Their language, Eastern Pwo Karen, is spoken by 1,050,000 people in Myanmar and Thailand. It is normally written in the Myanmar or Thai scripts, but the Leke use their own script.
The Leke script is generally believed to be the earliest Karen script, and a derivation from the Mon-Burmese, although the shapes of the letters have changed significantly over time and are now more angular in form. The Leke people themselves refer to their writing as li chaw wae, literally, ‘chicken-scratch letters’. They have written a holy book in this script.
This script is not currently recognized by ISO 15924, but is included in ScriptSource for research purposes. If you have any information on this script, please add the information to the site. Your contributions can be a great help in refining and expanding the ISO 15924 standard.
Languages that use this script
Language | Writing System Code | Writing System Status | SLDR/CLDR locale | Regional variants |
---|---|---|---|---|
Karen, Pwo West-Central Thailand | kjp-Leke | in use | kjp-Leke-MM (Myanmar) |
Unicode status
The Leke script is not yet in Unicode. The script has a tentative allocation at U+11B80..U+11BBF in the Roadmap to the SMP for the Unicode Standard.
Resources
- ScriptSource page for Leke - all about scripts, languages, and writing systems
- Wikipedia article on Leke