Kawi script

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Contains special characters Template:Brahmic The Kawi script or the Old Javanese script (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "Lang".) is a Brahmic script found primarily in Java and used across much of Maritime Southeast Asia between the 8th century and the 16th century.[1] The script is an abugida, meaning that characters are read with an inherent vowel. Diacritics are used, either to suppress the vowel and represent a pure consonant, or to represent other vowels.[2][3]

History

Template:Disputed-section The Kawi script is related to the Nagari or old-Devanagari script in India. Also called the Prae-Nagari in Dutch publications after the classic work of F.D.K. Bosch on early Indonesian scripts, the early-Nagari form of script was primarily used in the Kawi script form to write southeast Asian Sanskrit and Old Javanese language in central and eastern Java.[2][4] Kawi is the ancestor of traditional Indonesian scripts, such as Javanese, Sundanese and Balinese, as well as traditional Philippine scripts such as Luzon Kavi, the ancient scripts of Laguna Copperplate Inscriptions 900 A.D. and baybayin that has surviving records from the 16th century.[5] The strongest evidence of Nagari influence is found on the Belanjong pillar in Sanur in southern Bali, which consists of texts in two scripts: one in Early Nagari and the other in Early Kawi script. Further, the Sanur inscription overlaps into two languages – Sanskrit and Old Balinese. Of these, the Old Balinese language portion of the text is expressed in both Early Nagari and Early Kawi script. This inscription is likely from 914 CE, and its features are similar to the earliest forms of Kawi script found in the central and eastern regions of the Bali's neighboring island of Java.[6]

According to de Casparis, the early Nagari-inspired Kawi script thrived for over three centuries between the 7th- and 10th-century, and after 910 CE, the later Kawi script emerged incorporating regional innovations and South Indian influence (which in itself is influenced in part by Brahmi-Nandinagari). The four stages of Kawi script evolution are 910–950 CE (east Javanese Kawi I), 1019-1042 (east Javanese Kawi II), 1100–1220 (east Javanese Kawi III), 1050–1220 (square script of the Kediri period).[7]

The earliest known texts in Kawi date from the Singhasari kingdom in eastern Java. The more recent scripts were extant in the Majapahit kingdom, also in eastern Java, Bali, Borneo and Sumatra. The Kawi script has attracted scholarly interest both in terms of the history of language and script diffusion, as well as the possible routes for the migration of Buddhism and Hinduism to southeast Asian region because many of the major scripts of southeast Asia show South Indian Pallava script influence.[3]

The modern Javanese script, state George Campbell and Christopher Moseley, emerged in part through the modification of the Kawi script over the medieval era. This modification occurred in part via secondary forms called pasangan in Javanese, and also from changes in shape.[8] It also shows influence of the northern and western Javanese script forms based on the Pallava Grantha script found in Tamil Nadu as well as the Arabic and Roman script with changes in theo-political control of Java and nearby islands from the 14th- to 20th-century.[9]

Examples

The Kawi script was used in official documents or declarations inscribed in stone or copper tablets primarily in Java but also in other medieval kingdoms in archipelagic Southeast Asia. The following are some examples categorized using present-day states.

Philippines

Lord Namvaran's debt clearance certificate from the Duke of Tondo (900)

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File:Extract from Inskripsyon sa Binatbat na Tanso ng Laguna.jpg
The inscription displayed at the National Museum of Anthropology in Manila

An official document written using the Kawi script records the acquittal of Namvaran's debt to the Duke (Script error: No such module "Lang".) of Tondo in April 900. It is also known as the Laguna Copperplate Inscription.

It records the date of granting of the document being on the 4th of Krishna Paksha (black lunar side), month of Vaishakha, Shaka year 822, corresponding to 21 April 900,[10] and is written in Old Malay containing numerous Sanskrit terms and some Old Javanese and Old Tagalog terms and toponyms.[11]

It was found in 1989[12] at Lumbang River around Laguna de Bay in the province of Laguna near Manila, Philippines.

Butuan seal

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File:Butuan Ivory Seal.jpg
The Butuan ivory seal housed in the National Museum of the Philippines.

The Kawi lettering reads "Butban". The three square seal style characters are BA, TA and NA; the leftward curl underneath BA is the /u/ vowel diacritic, changing the syllable to BU; the small heart-shaped character under TA is the subscript conjunct form of BA which also removes the default /a/ vowel from TA; the large curl to the upper right is the Kawi virama, which indicates the default /a/ vowel on NA is not pronounced. The three blocks of characters together read "[Bu][Tba][N-]. In both Balinese script and Javanese script, which are descended from Kawi, the word is spelled in a very similar pattern, using a similar /u/ diacritic, conjunct form for B, and virama.

Unicode

Template:Main article The Kawi script was added to the Unicode Standard 15.0 in September 2022 based on a proposal by Aditya Bayu Perdana and Ilham Nurwansah.[13][14][1] An earlier preliminary proposal was submitted to the Unicode Technical Committee by Anshuman Pandey in 2012.[5]

The Unicode block for the Kawi script is U+11F00–U+11F5F and contains 86 characters:

Template:Unicode chart Kawi

Numerals

Kawi has its own set of Numerals:

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
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File:KAWI DIGIT ZERO.svg File:KAWI DIGIT ONE.svg File:KAWI DIGIT TWO.svg File:KAWI DIGIT THREE.svg File:KAWI DIGIT FOUR.svg File:KAWI DIGIT FIVE.svg File:KAWI DIGIT SIX.svg File:KAWI DIGIT SEVEN.svg File:KAWI DIGIT EIGHT.svg File:KAWI DIGIT NINE.svg

Child systems

Consonants

Basic Aksara (consonant)
ka kha ga gha nga ca cha ja jha nya ṭa ṭha ḍa ḍha ṇa ta tha da dha na pa pha ba bha ma ya ra la wa śa ṣa sa ha/a
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Images File:KAWI LETTER KA.svg File:KAWI LETTER KHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER GA.svg File:KAWI LETTER GHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER NGA.svg File:KAWI LETTER CA.svg File:KAWI LETTER CHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER JA.svg File:KAWI LETTER JHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER NYA.svg File:KAWI LETTER TTA.svg File:KAWI LETTER TTHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER DDA.svg File:KAWI LETTER DDHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER NNA.svg File:KAWI LETTER TA.svg File:KAWI LETTER THA.svg File:KAWI LETTER DA.svg File:KAWI LETTER DHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER NA.svg File:KAWI LETTER PA.svg File:KAWI LETTER PHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER BA.svg File:KAWI LETTER BHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER MA.svg File:KAWI LETTER YA.svg File:KAWI LETTER RA.svg File:KAWI LETTER LA.svg File:KAWI LETTER WA.svg File:KAWI LETTER SHA.svg File:KAWI LETTER SSA.svg File:KAWI LETTER SA.svg File:KAWI LETTER HA.svg
Hanacaraka
Javanese
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Surat Scripts
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Batak (Simalungun) Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script
Batak (Toba) Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script
Baybayin Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script
Buhid Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script
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Lontara Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script/Template:Script
Makasar Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script Template:Script
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Contemporary Use of Kawi script

The Kawi script still sees minor use in the 21st century. It can be seen in music videos[15] and on clothing.

Gallery

The above is a comparison of the development of Devanagari characters in Kawi, Old Mon of the kingdom of Ava, and Thai script.

See also

Notes

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References

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External links

Template:Kawi family Template:List of writing systems

  1. a b Aditya Bayu Perdana and Ilham Nurwansah 2020. Proposal to encode Kawi
  2. a b De Casparis, J. G. Indonesian Palaeography: A History of Writing in Indonesia from the beginnings to c. AD 1500, Leiden/Koln, 1975, pp. 35-42 with footnotes
  3. a b Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
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  5. a b Anshuman Pandey 2012. Preliminary Proposal to Encode the Kawi Script
  6. De Casparis, J. G. Indonesian Palaeography: A History of Writing in Indonesia from the beginnings to c. AD 1500, Leiden/Koln, 1975, pp. 36-37 with footnotes
  7. De Casparis, J. G. Indonesian Palaeography: A History of Writing in Indonesia from the beginnings to c. AD 1500, Leiden/Koln, 1975, pp. 38-43 with footnotes
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  11. Postma, Antoon. (1992). "The Laguna Copper-Plate Inscription: Text and Commentary." Philippine Studies vol. 40, no. 2: 183-203.
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  14. Unicode Technical Committee 2021. Approved Minutes of UTC Meeting 166
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