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Barnabodha was an Odia primer compiled by Madhusudan Rao. This book is the 6th volume of the original book and was published in 1896. Currently, none of the previous versions of this book are available anywhere in either physical or digital form.
Overwhelmingly, the Odia script was used to write the Odia language. However, it has been used as a regional writing-system for Sanskrit. Furthermore, Grierson [10] in his famed Linguistic Survey of India mentioned that the Odia script is sometimes used for Chhattisgarhi, an Eastern Hindi language, in the eastern border regions of Chhattisgarh.
Ancient Script Pre Brahmi Script in yogimath Rock Art at Nuapada of Odisha Pre Brahmi Script of Vikramkhol Inscription, Odisha. The childhood form of the Odia Script is the Kalinga Brahmi Script inscribed in stone. This Kalinga Brahmi is prevalent in the Kalinga region, whose language and writing style is different from that of other Brahmi.
English: This is a Sanskrit manuscript in Odia script. The colophon states it is Odia lipi. The text is a section of the Skanda Purana, and praises a teacher-counsellor (guru). This manuscript was acquired in the 19th-century, and was produced in or before the acquisition.
Karani or Chhata was a handwritten cursive writing system historically used to write the Odia language [2] [3] [4] primarily for court, land, temple and accounting records, and other administrative purposes. [5] Karani was quite different from [6] the printed form, the Odia script, which replaced it. [5]
A detailed chart depicting evolution of the Odia script as displayed in a museum at Ratnagiri, Odisha. The Odia language uses the Odia script (also known as the Kalinga script). It is a Brahmic script used to write primarily the Odia language and others like Sanskrit and several minor regional languages. The script has developed over nearly ...
The above manuscript leaf is in Odiya script found in the eastern state of India named Odisha. The manuscript was identified in early 19th-century and is now housed in Odisha government museum. The photo above is of a 2D artwork of a text that is over 600 years old, from a manuscript that was produced in or before the 19th-century CE.
Madala Panji language is Odia and was recorded in Odia and Telugu script, preserved in the Manuscript Library in Madras, which speaks about the story regarding image of Neela Madhava or Lord Jagannath of Udra desa, as Odisha was known in Middle Ages.