Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Early Dynastic Cuneiform

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Plane
  
SMP

Assigned
  
196 code points

Scripts
  
Cuneiform

8.0
  
196 (+196)

Range
  
U+12480..U+1254F (208 code points)

Unused
  
12 reserved code points

Early Dynastic Cuneiform is the name of a Unicode block of the Supplementary Multilingual Plane (SMP), at U+12480–U+1254F, introduced in version 8.0 (June 2015). It is a supplement to the earlier encoding of the cuneiform script in the two blocks U+12000–U+1237F "Cuneiform" and U+12400–U+1247F "Cuneiform Numbers and Punctuation".

"Early Dynastic Cuneiform" is designed to provide cuneiform signs used during the earliest phase of cuneiform writing, the Early Dynastic Period of Sumer (c. 2900–2350 BC), also known as archaic cuneiform, but discontinued in the Ur III period. The original Cuneiform block, introduced in version 5.0 (July 2006) is designed for the requirements of Ur III era cuneiform, with the younger (Old Assyrian and Neo-Assyrian) literary tradition to be considered font variants (analogous to the precedent of the approach followed in Han unification). Even for the Ur III era, many signs recognized in relevant dictionaries did not receive their own codepoint but are intended as being expressed as ligatures of two or more constituent signs, to be handled by the font, but for the purposes of representing archaic cuneiform, the inventory of the original block was recognized as insufficient and an additional 196 characters were added in version 8.0. The sign inventory is mostly based on the 1922 dictionary Liste der archaischen Keilschriftzeichen (LAK), with a substantial number of characters (U+124D5 to U+12518) identified by their LAK number (or as composed of characters identified by their LAK number) rather than attempting to identify them by a reconstructed phonetic value. The LAK has 870 signs in total, most of which are already covered in the previous Unicode blocks in the form of their Ur III continuants. The Preliminary Proposal for the block submitted in 2012.

History

The following Unicode-related documents record the purpose and process of defining specific characters in the Early Dynastic Cuneiform block:

References

Early Dynastic Cuneiform Wikipedia