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Early Dynastic Cuneiform
Unicode character block

Early Dynastic Cuneiform is 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+123FF "Cuneiform" and U+12400–U+1247F "Cuneiform Numbers and Punctuation".

"Early Dynastic Cuneiform" is designed to provide cuneiform signs used during one of the earliest phases of cuneiform writing, the Early Dynastic Period (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 code point 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 was submitted in 2012.

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Chart

Early Dynastic Cuneiform[1][2]Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
 0123456789ABCDEF
U+1248x𒒀𒒁𒒂𒒃𒒄𒒅𒒆𒒇𒒈𒒉𒒊𒒋𒒌𒒍𒒎𒒏
U+1249x𒒐𒒑𒒒𒒓𒒔𒒕𒒖𒒗𒒘𒒙𒒚𒒛𒒜𒒝𒒞𒒟
U+124Ax𒒠𒒡𒒢𒒣𒒤𒒥𒒦𒒧𒒨𒒩𒒪𒒫𒒬𒒭𒒮𒒯
U+124Bx𒒰𒒱𒒲𒒳𒒴𒒵𒒶𒒷𒒸𒒹𒒺𒒻𒒼𒒽𒒾𒒿
U+124Cx𒓀𒓁𒓂𒓃𒓄𒓅𒓆𒓇𒓈𒓉𒓊𒓋𒓌𒓍𒓎𒓏
U+124Dx𒓐𒓑𒓒𒓓𒓔𒓕𒓖𒓗𒓘𒓙𒓚𒓛𒓜𒓝𒓞𒓟
U+124Ex𒓠𒓡𒓢𒓣𒓤𒓥𒓦𒓧𒓨𒓩𒓪𒓫𒓬𒓭𒓮𒓯
U+124Fx𒓰𒓱𒓲𒓳𒓴𒓵𒓶𒓷𒓸𒓹𒓺𒓻𒓼𒓽𒓾𒓿
U+1250x𒔀𒔁𒔂𒔃𒔄𒔅𒔆𒔇𒔈𒔉𒔊𒔋𒔌𒔍𒔎𒔏
U+1251x𒔐𒔑𒔒𒔓𒔔𒔕𒔖𒔗𒔘𒔙𒔚𒔛𒔜𒔝𒔞𒔟
U+1252x𒔠𒔡𒔢𒔣𒔤𒔥𒔦𒔧𒔨𒔩𒔪𒔫𒔬𒔭𒔮𒔯
U+1253x𒔰𒔱𒔲𒔳𒔴𒔵𒔶𒔷𒔸𒔹𒔺𒔻𒔼𒔽𒔾𒔿
U+1254x𒕀𒕁𒕂𒕃
Notes1.^ As of Unicode version 16.02.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

History

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

VersionFinal code points4CountL2 IDWG2 IDDocument
8.0U+12480..12543196L2/12-024N4179Everson, Michael (2012-01-27), Preliminary proposal for encoding Early Dynastic Cuneiform
L2/12-208N4278Everson, Michael (2012-06-13), Proposal for Early Dynastic Cuneiform
L2/12-239Moore, Lisa (2012-08-14), "C.4", UTC #132 Minutes
L2/12-389Anderson, Deborah (2012-11-08), Duplicate EARLY DYNASTIC CUNEIFORM character: U+124D2 CUNEIFORM SIGN KA TIMES U
L2/12-343R2Moore, Lisa (2012-12-04), "Consensus 133-C37", UTC #133 Minutes, Rescind approval of U+124D2 CUNEIFORM SIGN KA TIMES U.
N4353 (pdf, doc)"M60.11", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 60, 2013-05-23
L2/13-132Moore, Lisa (2013-07-29), "Consensus 136-C16", UTC #136 Minutes, Approve a change in range for Early Dynastic Cuneiform ...
N4403 (pdf, doc)Umamaheswaran, V. S. (2014-01-28), "Resolution M61.02 item d", Unconfirmed minutes of WG 2 meeting 61, Holiday Inn, Vilnius, Lithuania; 2013-06-10/14

References

  1. Everson, Michael; Crisostomo, C. Jay; Tinney, Steve (2012-06-13). "N4278: Proposal for Early Dynastic Cuneiform" (PDF). Working Group Document, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2. https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2012/12208-n4278-early-dynastic-cuneiform.pdf

  2. Deimel, P. Anton (1922). "Liste der archaischen Keilschriftzeichen von Fara" (PDF). Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft. http://www.etana.org/sites/default/files/coretexts/14880.pdf

  3. Everson and Crisostomo (2012): "The proposed glyphs have been compiled primarily from the modern Assyriological sign list of the Early Dynastic period, Liste der archaischen Keilschriftzeichen aus Fara (henceforth LAK), in conjunction with the Oracc Global Sign List (www.oracc.org/ogsl). Every sign in LAK was carefully considered and collated by available photographs (provided by the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative www.cdli.ucla.edu) and hand copies. If the sign was determined to have been incorporated in the original Sumero-Akkadian Unicode proposal, N2786, it was not included in this proposal. Also not included are glyphs given in LAK which do not derive from the Early Dynastic period, but rather only from later periods such as Ur III or Old Babylonian. Moreover, numerals have been omitted due to the complexity of numeral signs from this period. [...] Additionally, glyphs discovered in two publications since LAK, Robert D. Biggs Oriental Institute Publications vol. 99 and Miguel Civil Cornell University Studies in Assyriology and Sumerology vol. 12, have been incorporated."

  4. Proposed code points and characters names may differ from final code points and names