Visigothic script
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Visigothic script was a type of medieval script that originated in the Visigothic Kingdom in Hispania (the Iberian Peninsula). Its more limiting alternative designations {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} associate it with scriptoria specifically in Toledo and with Mozarabic culture more generally, respectively.
The script, which exists in book-hand and cursive versions, was used from approximately the late seventh century until the thirteenth century, mostly in Visigothic Iberia but also somewhat in the Catalan kingdom in current southern France. It was perfected in the 9th–11th centuries and declined afterwards. It developed from uncial script, and shares many features of uncial, especially an uncial form of the letter Template:Angbr.
Other features of the script include an open-top Template:Angbr (very similar to the letter Template:Angbr), similar shapes for the letters Template:Angbr and Template:Angbr, and a long letter Template:Angbr resembling the modern letter Template:Angbr. There are two forms of the letter Template:Angbr, one with a straight vertical ascender and another with an ascender slanting towards the left. The top stroke of the letter Template:Angbr, by itself, has a hook curving to the left; Template:Angbr also has a number of other forms when used in ligatures, and there are two different ligatures for the two sounds of Template:Angbr (“hard” or unassibilated and "soft" or sibilated) as spoken in Hispano-Latin during this period. The letters Template:Angbr and Template:Angbr also have many different forms when written in ligature. Of particular interest is the special Visigothic z Template:Angbr, which, after adoption into Carolingian handwriting, eventually transformed into the c-cedilla Template:Angbr.
A capital-letter display script was developed from the standard script, with long slender forms. There was also a cursive form that was used for charters and non-religious writings, which had northern ("Leonese") and southern ("Mozarabic") forms. The Leonese cursive was used in the Christian north, and the Mozarabic was used by Christians living in the Muslim south. The cursive forms were probably influenced by Roman cursive, brought to Iberia from North Africa.
Visigothic script has many similarities with Beneventan script and Merovingian script. Template:Charmap
See alsoEdit
Further readingEdit
- 'Fonts for Latin Paleography: User's Manual. 6th edition' A manual of Latin paleography; a comprehensive PDF file containing 82 pages profusely illustrated, 4 January 2024).
- Littera Visigothica, blog specialized in Visigothic script
- Visigothic Minuscule on Medieval Writing
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