Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox Writing system Template:Brahmic The Gupta script (sometimes referred to as Gupta Brahmi script or Late Brahmi script)<ref name=sharma>Sharma, Ram. 'Brahmi Script' . Delhi: BR Publishing Corp, 2002</ref> was used for writing Sanskrit and is associated with the Gupta Empire of the Indian subcontinent, which was a period of material prosperity and great religious and scientific developments. The Gupta script was descended from Brāhmī and gave rise to the Śāradā and Siddhaṃ scripts. These scripts in turn gave rise to many of the most important Indic scripts, including Devanāgarī (the most common script used for writing Sanskrit since the 19th century), the Gurmukhī script for Punjabi, the Odia script, the Bengali-Assamese script and the Tibetan script.
Origins and classificationEdit
The Gupta script was descended from the Ashokan Brāhmī script, and is a crucial link between Brahmi and most other Brahmic scripts, a family of alphasyllabaries or abugidas. This means that while only consonantal phonemes have distinct symbols, vowels are marked by diacritics, with {{#invoke:IPA|main}} being the implied pronunciation when the diacritic is not present. In fact, the Gupta script works in exactly the same manner as its predecessor and successors, and only the shapes and forms of the graphemes and diacritics are different.
Through the 4th century, letters began to take more cursive and symmetric forms, as a result of the desire to write more quickly and aesthetically. This also meant that the script became more differentiated throughout the Empire, with regional variations which have been broadly classified into three, four or five categories;<ref name=anupama>Srivastava, Anupama. The Development of Imperial Gupta Brahmi Script. New Delhi: Ramanand, 1998</ref><ref>Fischer, Steven Roger. A History of Writing. UK: Reaktion, 2004</ref> however, a definitive classification is lacking, because even in a single inscription, there may be variation in how a particular symbol is written. In this sense, the term Gupta script should be taken to mean any form of writing derived from the Gupta period, even though there may be a lack of uniformity in the scripts.
Template:Brahmi-Gupta-Devanagari
InscriptionsEdit
The surviving inscriptions of the Gupta script are mostly found on iron or stone pillars, and on gold coins from the Gupta Dynasty. One of the most important was the Prayagraj (Allahabad) Prasasti. Composed by Harisena, the court poet and minister of Samudragupta, it describes Samudragupta's reign, beginning from his accession to the throne as the second king of the Gupta Dynasty and including his conquest of other kings. It is inscribed on the Allahabad pillar of Ashoka.
AlphabetEdit
The Gupta alphabet is composed of 37 letters: 32 consonants with the inherent ending "a" and 5 independent vowels. In addition diacritics are attached to the consonants in order to change the sound of the final vowel (from the inherent "a" to other sounds such as i, u, e, o, au ...). Consonants can also be combined into compounds, also called conjunct consonants (for example sa+ya are combined vertically to give "sya").<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="GU"/>
Independent vowelsEdit
Letter | IAST and Sanskrit IPA |
Letter | IAST and Sanskrit IPA |
---|---|---|---|
File:Gupta allahabad a.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | File:Gupta allahabad aa.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} |
File:Gupta allahabad i.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | |
File:Gupta allahabad u.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | |
File:Gupta allahabad e.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | File:Gupta allahabad o.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} |
Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | File:Gupta allahabad au.svg | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | |
Template:Script | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | Template:Script | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} |
Template:Script | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} | Template:Script | Template:IAST {{#invoke:IPA|main}} |
ConsonantsEdit
In UnicodeEdit
The Unicode Standard does not explicitly state that the Gupta script is considered a stylistic variation of Brahmi,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> though use of the Brahmi encoding is one approach.
Gupta numismaticsEdit
The study of Gupta coins began with the discovery of a hoard of gold coins in 1783. Many other such hoards have since been discovered, the most important being the Bayana (situated in Bharatpur district of Rajasthan) hoard, discovered in 1946, which contained more than 2000 gold coins issued by the Gupta Kings.<ref>Bajpai, KD. 'Indian Numismatic Studies. ' New Delhi: Abhinav Publications 2004</ref> Many of the Gupta Empire's coins bear inscriptions of legends or mark historic events. In fact, it was one of the first Indian Empires to do so, probably as a result of its unprecedented prosperity.<ref name=anupama/> Almost every Gupta king issued coins, beginning with its first king, Chandragupta I.
The scripts on the coin are also of a different nature compared to scripts on pillars, due to conservatism regarding the coins that were to be accepted as currency, which would have prevented regional variations in the script from manifesting on the coinage.<ref name=anupama/> Moreover, space was more limited especially on their silver coins, and thus many of the symbols are truncated or stunted. An example is the symbol for /ta/ and /na/, which were often simplified to vertical strokes.
GalleryEdit
- Allahabad stone pillar inscription of Samudragupta.jpg
The Allahabad pillar inscription of Samudragupta, with its standardised Gupta characters.
- Brahmi.png
Brahmi and its descendent scripts.
- 5th or 6th century Gopika cave inscription, Sanskrit, Shaktism, Anantavarman, Gupta script 2.jpg
The 5th- or 6th-century Gupta script Gopika Cave Inscription in Sanskrit about goddess Durga
- Das Buch der Schrift (Faulmann) 141.jpg
Gupta script decipherment table
- A palm leaf Sanskrit manuscript in Brahmi script from Miran China.jpg
A palm leaf Sanskrit manuscript in early Gupta Brahmi script, discovered in Miran, northwest China.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Sri Yashodharman.jpg
The name File:Gupta allahabad shrii.jpgFile:Gupta allahabad y.svgFile:Gupta allahabad sho.jpgFile:Gupta allahabad dh.svgFile:Gupta allahabad rmm.jpg Śrī Yaśodharmma ("Lord Yashodharman") in Gupta script in Line 4 of the Mandsaur stone inscription of Yashodharman-Vishnuvardhana.<ref name="EG">Template:Cite book</ref>
See alsoEdit
- Bengali–Assamese script
- Bhattiprolu script
- Brahmic scripts
- Kadamba script
- Lipi scripts
- Pallava script
- Telugu-Kannada alphabet
ReferencesEdit
Further readingEdit
- Carl Faulmann (1835–1894), Das Buch der Schrift, Druck und Verlag der Kaiserlichen Hof-und Staatsdruckerei, 1880
External linksEdit
- Template:In lang The Gupta Alphabet
- AncientScripts.com entry on the Gupta Script
- Ye, Shao-Yong. (2009). An eastern variety of the post-Gupta script: Akṣara List of the Manuscripts of the Mūlamadhyamakakārikā and Buddhapālita's Commentary (ca. 550–650 CE). Research Institute of Sanskrit Manuscripts & Buddhist Literature, Peking University.