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The Armenian alphabet ( hy, Հայոց գրեր, or , ), or more broadly the Armenian script, is an
alphabet An alphabet is a standardized set of basic written graphemes (called letters) that represent the phonemes of certain spoken languages. Not all writing systems represent language in this way; in a syllabary, each character represents a syllab ...
ic writing system developed for
Armenian Armenian may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to Armenia, a country in the South Caucasus region of Eurasia * Armenians, the national people of Armenia, or people of Armenian descent ** Armenian Diaspora, Armenian communities across the ...
and occasionally used to write other languages. It was developed around 405 AD by
Mesrop Mashtots Mesrob or Mesrop ( hy, Մեսրոպ) is an Armenian given name. Mesrob / Mesrop may refer to: * Mesrop Mashtots, also Saint Mesrop, Armenian monk, theologian and linguist. Inventor of the Armenian alphabet ** Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient M ...
, an Armenian linguist and ecclesiastical leader. The script originally had 36 letters. Eventually, two more were adopted in the 13th century. In
reformed Armenian orthography The Armenian orthography reform occurred between 1922 and 1924 in Soviet Armenia and was partially reviewed in 1940. Its main features were neutralization of classical etymological writing and the adjustment of phonetic realization and writing. Th ...
(1920s), the ligature is also treated as a letter, bringing the total number of letters to 39. The Armenian word for 'alphabet' is ('), named after the first two letters of the Armenian alphabet: hy, այբ ' and hy, բեն '. Armenian is written horizontally, left to right.


History and development


Possible antecedents

One of the classical accounts of the existence of an Armenian alphabet before Mesrop Mashtots comes from
Philo of Alexandria Philo of Alexandria (; grc, Φίλων, Phílōn; he, יְדִידְיָה, Yəḏīḏyāh (Jedediah); ), also called Philo Judaeus, was a Hellenistic Jewish philosopher who lived in Alexandria, in the Roman province of Egypt. Philo's de ...
(20 BC – AD 50), who in his writings notes that the work of the
Greek philosopher Ancient Greek philosophy arose in the 6th century BC, marking the end of the Greek Dark Ages. Greek philosophy continued throughout the Hellenistic period and the period in which Greece and most Greek-inhabited lands were part of the Roman Empire ...
and historian Metrodorus of Scepsis (), ''On Animals'', was translated into Armenian. Metrodorus was a close friend and a court historian of the Armenian emperor Tigranes the Great and also wrote his biography. A third century Roman theologian, Hippolytus of Rome (AD 170–235), in his ''Chronicle'', while writing about his contemporary, Emperor Severus Alexander ( AD), mentions that the Armenians are amongst those nations who have their own distinct alphabet. Philostratus, Philostratus the Athenian, a sophist of the second and third centuries AD, wrote: According to the fifth-century Armenian historian Movses Khorenatsi, Bardesanes of Edessa (AD 154–222), who founded the gnosticism, Gnostic current of the Bardaisanites, went to the Armenian castle of Kemah, Erzincan, Ani and there read the work of a pre-Christian Armenian priest named Voghyump, written in the Mithraic script of the Armenian temples, named after Mihr (Armenian deity), Mihr, the Armenian mythology, Armenian national god of light, truth, and the sun. In Voghyump's work, amongst other histories, an episode was noted of the Armenian King Tigranes VII (who reigned from 144 to 161, and again from AD 164–186) erecting a monument on the tomb of his brother, the Mithraic High Priest of the Kingdom of Armenia (antiquity), Kingdom of Greater Armenia, Mazhan. Movses of Khoren notes that Bardesanes translated this Armenian book into Syriac language, Syriac (Aramaic), and later also into Koine Greek, Greek. Another important evidence for the existence of a pre-Mashtotsian alphabet is the fact that the pantheon of the ancient Armenians included Tir (god), Tir, who was the patron god of writing and science. A 13th-century Armenian historian, Vardan Areveltsi, in his ''History'', notes "that an Armenian script existed of old is attested" during the reign of King Leo I, King of Armenia, Leo the Magnificent (), after coins naming idolatrous kings were found stamped with the script. The evidence that the Armenian scholars of the Middle Ages knew about the existence of a pre-Mashtotsian alphabet can also be found in other medieval works, including the first book composed in the Mashtotsian alphabet by the pupil of Mashtots, Koriwn, in the first half of the fifth century. Koriwn notes that Mashtots was told of the existence of ancient Armenian letters which he was initially trying to integrate into his own alphabet.


Creation by Mashtots

The Armenian alphabet was introduced by
Mesrop Mashtots Mesrob or Mesrop ( hy, Մեսրոպ) is an Armenian given name. Mesrob / Mesrop may refer to: * Mesrop Mashtots, also Saint Mesrop, Armenian monk, theologian and linguist. Inventor of the Armenian alphabet ** Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient M ...
and Isaac of Armenia (Sahak Partev) in AD 405. Medieval Armenian sources also claim that Mashtots invented the Georgian alphabet, Georgian and Caucasian Albanian alphabet, Caucasian Albanian alphabets around the same time. However, most scholars link the creation of the Georgian script to the process of Christianization of Iberia, a core Georgian kingdom of Kartli. The alphabet was therefore most probably created between the conversion of Iberia under Mirian III of Iberia, Mirian III (326 or 337) and the Bir el Qutt inscriptions of 430, contemporaneously with the Armenian alphabet. Traditionally, the following phrase translated from Solomon's ''Book of Proverbs'' is said to be the first sentence to be written down in Armenian by Mashtots: Various scripts have been credited with being the prototype for the Armenian alphabet. Pahlavi scripts, Pahlavi was the priestly script in Armenia before the introduction of Christianity, and Syriac alphabet, Syriac, along with Greek, was one of the alphabets of Christian scripture. Armenian shows some similarities to both. However, the general consensus is that Armenian is modeled after the Greek alphabet, supplemented with letters from a different source or sources for Armenian sounds not found in Greek. This is suggested by the Greek order of the Armenian alphabet; the ''ow'' ligature for the vowel , as in Greek; the similarity of the letter in shape and sound value to Cyrillic Ии and Greek alphabet#Sound values, (Modern) Greek Ηη; and the shapes of letters which "seem derived from a variety of cursive Greek", including Greek/Armenian pairs /, /, and /. It has been speculated by some scholars in African studies, following Dimitri Olderogge, that the Ge'ez script had an influence on certain letter shapes, but this has not been supported by any experts in Armenian studies. There are four principal calligraphic hand (writing style), hands of the script. , or 'ironclad letters', seen as Mesrop's original, was used in manuscripts from the 5th to 13th century and is still preferred for epigraphic inscriptions. , or 'cursive', was invented in the 10th century and became popular in the 13th. It has been the standard printed form since the 16th century. , or 'minuscule', invented initially for speed, was extensively used in the Armenian diaspora in the 16th to 18th centuries, and later became popular in printing. , or 'slanted writing', is now the most common form. The earliest known example of the script's usage was a dedicatory inscription over the west door of the Tekor Basilica, church of Saint Sarkis in Tekor. Based on the known individuals mentioned in the inscription, it has been dated to the 480s. The earliest known surviving example of usage outside of Armenia is a mid-6th century mosaic inscription in the chapel of St Polyeuctos in Jerusalem. A papyrus discovered in 1892 at Fayyum and containing Greek words written in Armenian script has been dated on historical grounds to after the creation of the script, i.e. after 400, and on paleographic grounds between the 5th and 7th centuries. It is now in the Bibliotheque Nationale de France. The earliest surviving manuscripts written in Armenian using Armenian script date from the 9th–10th century.


Later development

Certain shifts in the language were at first not reflected in the orthography. The digraph (''au'') followed by a consonant used to be pronounced [au] (as in ''luau'') in Classical Armenian, but due to a sound shift it came to be pronounced , and has since the 13th century been written (''ō''). For example, classical (, , 'day') became pronounced , and is now written (). (One word has kept ''aw'', now pronounced : () 'pigeon', and there are a few proper names still having ''aw'' before a consonant: Tauros, Faustos, etc.) For this reason, today there are native Armenian words beginning with the letter (''ō'') although this letter was taken from the Greek alphabet to write foreign words beginning with ''o'' . The number and order of the letters have changed over time. In the Middle Ages, two new letters ( , ) were introduced in order to better represent foreign sounds; this increased the number of letters from 36 to 38. From 1922 to 1924, Soviet Armenia adopted a Spelling reform of the Armenian language 1922–1924, reformed spelling of the Armenian language. The reform changed the digraph and the ligature into two new letters, but it generally did not change the pronunciation of individual letters (#Chart notes, see the footnotes of the chart). Those outside of the (former) Post-Soviet states, Soviet sphere, including all Western Armenians as well as Eastern Armenians in Iran, have rejected the reformed spellings and continue to use the Classical Armenian orthography, traditional Armenian orthography. They criticize some aspects of the reforms and allege political motives behind them.


Alphabet

*Listen to the pronunciation of the letters in or in . Notes: #Primarily used in classical orthography; after the reform used word-initially and in some compound words. #Except in 'who' and 'those (people)' in Eastern Armenian. #Iranian Armenians (who speak a subbranch of Eastern Armenian) pronounce the sound represented by this letter with a retracted tongue body : post-alveolar rather than alveolar. #In classical orthography, and are considered a digraph ( + ) and a ligature ( + ), respectively. In reformed orthography, they are separate letters of the alphabet: is the 37th letter of the alphabet, and is the 34th letter, taking the place of . #In reformed orthography, the letter appears only as a component of . In classical orthography, the letter usually represents , except in the digraph . The spelling reform in Soviet Armenia replaced with the trigraph . #Except in the present tense of 'to be': 'I am', 'you are (sing.)', 'we are', 'you are (pl.)', 'they are'. #The letter is generally used only at the start or end of a word, and so the sound is typically unwritten between consonants. One exception is (Western Armenian indefinite article, when followed by a word beginning with a vowel), e.g., 'one more time'. #The ligature has no majuscule form; when capitalized it is written as two letters (classical) or (reformed). #By the time this lowercase was included (Armenian alphabet reform of 1922-24 in the Soviet Union) in the alphabet, counting was conducted with Arabic numbers. Numbers over 9999 were achieved by putting a line over smaller letters-numerals


Handwritten forms

In handwriting, the upper- and lower-case letters look more similar than they do in print, and the stroke order is more apparent.


Ligatures

Ancient Armenian manuscripts used many Typographic ligature, ligatures. Some of the commonly used ligatures are: (+), (+), (+), (+), (+), (+), etc. Armenian print typefaces also include many ligatures. In the new orthography, the character is no longer a typographical ligature, but a distinct letter, placed in the new alphabetic sequence, before "o".


Punctuation

Armenian punctuation marks outside a word: * [ «  » ] The are used as ordinary quotation marks and they are placed like French guillemets: just above the baseline (preferably vertically centered in the middle of the x-height of Armenian lowercase letters). The computer-induced use of English-style single or double quotes (vertical, diagonal or curly forms, placed above the baseline near the M-height of uppercase or tall lowercase letters and at the same level as accents) is strongly discouraged in Armenian as they look too much like other – unrelated – Armenian punctuations. * [ , ] The is used as a comma, and placed as in English. * [ ՝ ] The (which looks like a comma-shaped reversed apostrophe) is used as a short stop, and placed in the same manner as the Semicolon (punctuation), semicolon, to indicate a pause that is longer than that of a comma, but shorter than that of a colon; in many texts it is replaced by the single opening single quote (a 6-shaped, or mirrored 9-shaped, or descending-wedge-shaped elevated comma), or by a spacing grave accent. * [ ․ ] The (whose single dot on the baseline looks like a Latin full stop) is used like an ordinary colon (punctuation), colon, mainly to separate two closely related (but still independent) clauses, or when a long list of items follows. * [ wikt:։, ։ ] The (whose vertically stacked two dots look like a Latin colon) is used as the ordinary full stop, and placed at the end of the sentence (many texts in Armenian replace the by the Latin colon as the difference is almost invisible at low resolution for normal texts, but the difference may be visible in headings and titles as the dots are often thicker to match the same optical weight as vertical strokes of letters, the dots filling the common ''x''-height of Armenian letters). The following Armenian punctuation marks placed above and slightly to the right of the vowel whose tone is modified, in order to reflect intonation: * [ wikt:՜, ՜ ] The (which looks like a diagonally rising tilde) is used as an exclamation mark. * [ wikt:՛, ՛ ] The (which looks like a non-spacing acute accent) is used as an Emphasis (typography)#Punctuation marks, emphasis mark. * [ wikt:՞, ՞ ] The is used as a question mark. Armenian punctuation marks used inside a word: * [ wikt:֊, ֊ ] The is used as the ordinary Armenian hyphen. * [ wikt:՟, ՟ ] The ''wikt:պատիվ, '' was used as an Armenian abbreviation mark, and was placed on top of an abbreviated word to indicate that it was abbreviated. It is now obsolete. * [ ՚ ] The is used as a spacing apostrophe (which looks either like a vertical stick or wedge pointing down, or as an elevated 9-shaped comma, or as a small superscript left-to-right closing parenthesis or half ring), only in Western Armenian, to indicate elision of a vowel, usually .


Transliteration

ISO 9985 (1996) transliterates the Armenian alphabet for modern Armenian as follows: In the linguistic literature on Classical Armenian, slightly different systems are in use.


Use for other languages

For about 250 years, from the early 18th century until around 1950, more than 2,000 books in the Turkish language were printed using the Armenian alphabet. Not only did Armenians read this Turkish in Armenian script, so did the non-Armenian (including the Ottoman Turkish) elite. An American correspondent in Marash in 1864 calls the alphabet "Armeno-Turkish", describing it as consisting of 31 Armenian letters and "infinitely superior" to the Ottoman Turkish alphabet, Arabic or Karamanli Turkish, Greek alphabets for rendering Turkish. This Armenian script was used alongside the Arabic script on official documents of the Ottoman Empire written in Ottoman Turkish. For instance, the first novel to be written in Turkish in the Ottoman Empire was Vartan Pasha, Hovsep Vartanian's 1851 ''Akabi Hikayesi'' (Akabi's Story), written in the Armenian script. When the Armenian Duzian family managed the Ottoman mint during the reign of Abdülmecid I, they kept records in Armenian script but in the Turkish language. From the middle of the 19th century, the Armenian alphabet was also used for books written in the Kurdish language in the Ottoman Empire. The Armenian script was also used by Turkish-speaking assimilated Armenians between the 1840s and 1890s. Constantinople was the main center of Armenian-scripted Turkish press. This portion of the Armenian press declined in the early twentieth century but continued until the Armenian genocide of 1915. In areas inhabited by both Armenians and Assyrian people, Assyrians, Syriac texts were occasionally written in the Armenian script, although the opposite phenomenon, Armenian texts written in Syriac alphabet, Serto, the Western Syriac script, is more common. The Kipchak language, Kipchak-speaking Armenian Christians of Podolia and Galicia (Central Europe), Galicia used an Armenian alphabet to produce an extensive amount of literature between 1524 and 1669. The Armenian script, along with the Georgian script, Georgian, was used by the poet Sayat-Nova in his Armenian poems. An Armenian alphabet was an official script for the Kurdish language in 1921–1928 in Soviet Armenia. The Armeno-Tats, who've historically spoken Tat language (Caucasus), Tat, wrote their language in the Armenian alphabet.


Character encodings

The Armenian alphabet was added to the Unicode Standard in version 1.0, in October 1991. It is assigned the range U+0530–058F. Five Armenian typographic ligature, ligatures are encoded in the "Alphabetic presentation forms" block (code point range U+FB13–FB17). On 15 June 2011, the Unicode Technical Committee (UTC) accepted the Armenian dram sign for inclusion in the future versions of the Unicode Standard and assigned a code for the sign – U+058F (֏). In 2012 the sign was finally adopted in the Armenian block of ISO and Unicode international standards. The Armenian eternity sign, since 2013, is assigned Unicode U+058D (֍ – RIGHT-FACING ARMENIAN ETERNITY SIGN) and, for its left-facing variant, U+058E (֎ – LEFT-FACING ARMENIAN ETERNITY SIGN).


Legacy

The ArmSCII character encoding, developed between 1991 and 1999, was widely used in Windows 9x operating systems but has become obsolete due to the advent of Unicode. Similarly, Arasan-compatible fonts, based on Hrant Papazian's original Arasan font encoding from 1986, replaced ASCII's Latin characters with Armenian ones, like using the ASCII code for (65) to represent the Armenian . These fonts, once popular on Windows 9x, have also been deprecated in favor of Unicode.


Keyboard layouts

The phonetic keyboard layout is the most common Armenian keyboard layout, enjoying broad support across modern operating systems. Because there are more characters in the Armenian alphabet (39) than in Latin (26), some Armenian characters appear on non-alphabetic keys on a conventional QWERTY keyboard (for example, maps to '',''). The phonetic layout is not very performant, due to the letter frequency difference between the Armenian and English languages, although it is easier to learn and use.


See also

* Armenian braille * Armenian calendar * Armenian numerals * Classical Armenian orthography * Reformed Armenian orthography * Romanization of Armenian (includes ISO 9985)


Notes


References


External links


բառարան.հայ
– Armenian dictionary.
Monument of Armenian Alphabet

Armenian Apostolic (Orthodox) Church Library Online (in English, Armenian, and Russian)
Armenian Transliteration
English / French script to Armenian Transliteration
Hayadar.com – Online, Latin to Armenian transliteration engine.
Latin-Armenian Transliteration
Converts Latin letters into Armenian and vice versa. Supports multiple transliteration tables and spell checking.
Transliteration schemes for the Armenian alphabet
(transliteration.eki.ee) Armenian Orthography converters
Nayiri.com
(integrated orthography converter: reformed to classical) {{DEFAULTSORT:Armenian Alphabet Armenian alphabet, 4th century in Armenia Keyboard layouts Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity