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  2. Pahlavi scripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pahlavi_scripts

    Inscriptional Pahlavi is the name given to a variant of the Pahlavi script as used to render the 3rd–6th-century Middle Persian language inscriptions of the Sasanian emperors and other notables. Genuine Middle Persian, as it appears in these inscriptions, was the Middle Iranian language of Persia proper, the region in the south-western corner ...

  3. Middle Persian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Persian

    Middle Persian, also known by its endonym Pārsīk or Pārsīg (Inscriptional Pahlavi script: 𐭯𐭠𐭫𐭮𐭩𐭪, Manichaean script: 𐫛𐫀𐫡𐫘𐫏𐫐 ‎, Avestan script: 𐬞𐬀𐬭𐬯𐬍𐬐) in its later form, [1] [2] is a Western Middle Iranian language which became the literary language of the Sasanian Empire.

  4. Middle Persian literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Persian_literature

    These compositions, in the Aramaic-derived Book Pahlavi script, are traditionally known as "Pahlavi literature". The earliest texts in Zoroastrian Middle Persian were probably written down in late Sassanid times (6th–7th centuries), although they represent the codification of earlier oral tradition. [1]

  5. Psalter Pahlavi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psalter_Pahlavi

    Psalter Pahlavi is a cursive abjad that was used for writing Middle Persian on paper; it is thus described as one of the Pahlavi scripts. [1] It was written right to left, usually with spaces between words. [1] It takes its name from the Pahlavi Psalter, part of the Psalms translated from Syriac to Middle Persian and found in what is now ...

  6. List of Sasanian inscriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sasanian_inscriptions

    Early royal Sasanian inscriptions were trilingual: Middle Persian (in Inscriptional Pahlavi), Parthian (in Inscriptional Parthian) and Greek. Since the rule of Narseh, Greek was omitted. Book Pahlavi script replaced Inscriptional Pahlavi in late Middle Persian inscriptions.

  7. Inscriptional Pahlavi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inscriptional_Pahlavi

    Inscriptional Pahlavi is the earliest attested form of Pahlavi scripts, and is evident in clay fragments that have been dated to the reign of Mithridates I (r. 171–138 BC). Other early evidence includes the Pahlavi inscriptions of Parthian coins and the rock inscriptions of Sasanian emperors and other notables, such as Kartir the High Priest .

  8. Pahlavi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pahlavi

    Middle Persian, written in the Pahlavi script (including Zoroastrian Middle Persian of the 9th-11th century) Pahlavi scripts, as adopted to render various Middle Iranian languages; Pahlavi literature, Persian literature of the 1st millennium AD; Pahlavi Psalter, a 12-page non-contiguous section of a Middle Persian translation of a Syriac book ...

  9. Pahlavi Psalter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pahlavi_Psalter

    However, unlike Book Pahlavi script, which is a later but more common form of the consonantary and has 12 or 13 graphemes, the script of the psalms has 5 symbols more. The variant of the script used for the psalter was for almost a century the only evidence of that specific variant, which consequently came to be referred to as Psalter Pahlavi ...