Palmyrene Palmyran |
|
---|---|
Palmyrene inscribed tablet in the Musée du Louvre
|
|
Type | |
Languages | Palmyrene dialect of Aramaic |
Time period
|
100 BCE to 300 CE |
Parent systems
|
|
Sister systems
|
Ammonite Brāhmī (?) Edessan Elymaic Hatran Hebrew Mandaic Nabataean Pahlavi Parthian |
Direction | Right-to-left |
ISO 15924 | Palm, 126 |
Unicode alias
|
Palmyrene |
Final Accepted Script Proposal |
Palmyrene was a historical Semitic alphabet used to write the local Palmyrene dialect of Aramaic. It was used between 100 BCE and 300 CE in Palmyra in the Syrian desert. The oldest surviving Palmyrene inscription dates to 44 BCE. The last surviving inscription dates to 274 CE, two years after Palmyra was sacked by Roman Emperor Aurelian, ending the Palmyrene Empire. Use of the Palmyrene language and script declined, being replaced with Greek and Latin.
Palmyrene was derived from cursive versions of the Aramaic alphabet and shares many of its characteristics:
Palmyrene was normally written without spaces or punctuation between words and sentences (scriptio continua style).
Two forms of Palmyrene were developed: The rounded, cursive form derived from the Aramaic alphabet and later a decorative, monumental form developed from the cursive Palmyrene. Both the cursive and monumental forms commonly used typographic ligatures.
Palmyrene used a non-decimal system which built up numbers using combinations of their symbols for 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, and 20. It is similar to the system used for Aramaic which built numbers using their symbols for 1, 2, 3, 10, 20, 100, 1000, and 10000.
There are some styles in which the 'r'-letter (resh) is the same as the 'd'-letter (dalesh) with a dot on top, but there are styles in which the two letters are visually distinct. Ligation after b, ḥ, m, n, and q before some other consonants was common in some inscriptions but was not obligatory. There are also two fleurons (left-sided and right-sided) that tend to appear near numbers.
Examples of Palmyrene inscriptions were printed as far back as 1616 but accurate copies of Palmyrene/Greek bilingual inscriptions were not available until 1756. The Palmyrene alphabet was deciphered in the 1750s, literally overnight, by Abbé Jean-Jacques Barthélemy using these new, accurate copies of bilingual inscriptions.
Palmyrene was added to the Unicode Standard in June, 2014 with the release of version 7.0.
The Unicode block for Palmyrene is U+10860–U+1087F:
Funerary slabstone bearing a Palmyrene inscription (Musée du Louvre)