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Sogdian

Detail from letter using Sogdian script (see Use & History)

Script details

See all script details: code, region, status and more
Code Sogd
Script type abjad
Region Middle Eastern
Status Historical
Direction RTL
Baseline bottom
Case no
White space unspecified
Complex behaviors diacritics, contextual forms, optional ligatures
OpenType code sogd
ISO 15924 Numeric Code / Key 141 (right-to-left alphabetic)

Explanation of script details

Script description

The Sogdian script was one of three scripts used for writing the Sogdian language, a middle Iranian language spoken in Sogdiana, a region in the Achaemenid Persian empire comprising parts of modern-day Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Pakistan and China.

Read the full description…This language was also written in the Manichaean and Syriac scripts. Sogdian writing derives from the Aramaic script and was used from approximately the 1st to the 13th centuries AD, during which time three main varieties emerged, the Ancient Letters, the Sutra style and the Uyghur style. This third style should not be confused with the Old Uyghur alphabet, although in some sources Sutra Sogdian is simply called ‘Sogdian’, and Uyghur Sogdian is simply called ‘Uyghur’, due to the latter being widely used to write the Turkic Uyghur language in the 8th century. Some sources also call the Sutra and Uyghur styles formal and cursive respectively.

In the Ancient Letters, the letters are distinct in shape and unconnected in writing. This is the oldest form of the script. Around the 5th century, a cursive bookhand, Sutra, was developed for writing Buddhist religious texts. Letters are sometimes more difficult to distinguish in this style. The latest form, Uyghur, was developed in the 7th century and has proved very difficult to decipher due to many of the letters being too similar for modern-day scholars to distinguish. This was also a cursive style.

The Sogdian script was an abjad, that is, vowels were optional. It was written from right to left using seventeen letters, many of which had contextual forms depending on their position (initial, medial or final) in the word. Some letters represented up to three sounds. Diacritics were used (inconsistently) to represent additional sounds, for example a dot could be written under a ‘z’ to represent [ž].

Sogdian writing retained the Aramaic principle of starting every written word with a consonant, so the aleph (glottal stop) symbol was always written before a word-initial vowel. When word-internal vowels were written, they were often represented using the ‘w’ or ‘y’ letters. At first, only long vowels were represented, but later manuscripts use these letters for short vowels also. This left no distinction in writing between long and short vowels, so a tendency developed to insert an aleph before a word-internal long vowel. In the latest forms of the script, aleph was also inserted before short vowels, again removing the written distinction of vowel length. The result was that spelling was very irregular, with most vowel letters with or without aleph capable of representing more than one vowel sound, and most vowel sounds able to be represented with more than one letter or combination of letters.

Written Sogdian also employed a number of heterograms, words which were written in the Aramaic language but pronounced as the corresponding Sogdian word.

The Sogdian script was usually written horizontally from right to left, but, for representing the Uyghur language, it was written vertically in left-to-right columns. This vertical style was the forerunner of the Old Uyghur script, which in turn developed into the Mongolian and Manchu scripts.

Languages that use this script

LanguageWriting System
Code
Writing System
Status
SLDR/CLDR
locale
Regional
variants
Sogdiansog-Sogdin use sog-Sogd-XX
Uzbekuz-Sogdin use uz-Sogd-CN (China)

Unicode status

In The Unicode Standard, Sogdian script implementation is discussed in Chapter 14: South and Central Asia-III — Ancient Scripts.

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