Ancient African orthographies Ancient Egyptian Perhaps the most famous African writing system is ancient
Egyptian hieroglyphs. These developed later into forms known as
Hieratic,
Demotic and, through
Phoenician and
Greek,
Coptic. The
Bohairic dialect of the
Coptic language is still used today as the
liturgical language in the
Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria and the
Coptic Catholic Church of Alexandria. Other dialects of Coptic include
Sahidic,
Akhmimic,
Lycopolitan,
Fayyumic, and
Oxyrhynchite.
Ancient Meroitic The Meroitic language and its writing system was used in
Meroë and the wider
Kingdom of Kush (in modern day
Sudan) during the Meroitic period. The Kingdom of Kush previously used the Egyptian writing system since 2000 BC. The meroitic script was used from 450 BC to 400 AD.. (
qif in
Arabic,
bedd in
Riffian)
Tifinagh The
Tifinagh alphabet is still actively used to varying degrees in trade and modernized forms for writing of
Berber languages (Tamazight, Tamashek, etc.) of the
Maghreb,
Sahara, and
Sahel regions (Savage 2008). Neo-Tifinagh is encoded in the
Unicode range U+2D30 to U+2D7F, starting from version 4.1.0. There are 55 defined characters, but there are more characters being used than those defined. In ISO 15924, the code Tfng is assigned to Neo-Tifinagh.
Ge'ez The
Geʽez script is an
abugida that was created in the
Kingdom of Aksum (in modern-day Ethiopia and Eritrea) in the 1st-4th century AD for writing the
Geʽez language. It developed from the
Ancient South Arabian (Sabaean) Script which was introduced to Ethiopia and Eritrea around 800 BC. The script is used today in
Ethiopia and
Eritrea for
Amharic,
Tigrinya, and several other languages. It is sometimes called
Ethiopic, and is known in Eritrea and Ethiopia as the
fidel or
abugida. Geʽez or Ethiopic has been computerized and assigned
Unicode 3.0 codepoints between U+1200 and U+137F (decimal 4608–4991), containing the basic syllable signs for
Geʽez,
Amharic, and
Tigrinya, punctuation and numerals.
Symbols Nsibidi Nsibidi (also known as "nsibiri", "nchibiddi", and "nchibiddy") is a system of symbols indigenous to what is now southeastern Nigeria that is apparently an
ideographic script, though there have been suggestions that it includes
logographic elements. The symbols are at least several centuries old: early forms appeared on excavated pottery as well as what are most likely ceramic stools and headrests from the
Calabar region, with a range of dates from 400 (and possibly earlier, 2000 BC) to 1400 CE.
Adinkra Adinkra is a set of symbols developed by the
Akan, used to represent concepts and aphorisms. Oral tradition attributes the origin of adinkra to
Gyaman in modern-day
Ghana and
Côte d'Ivoire. According to
Kwame Anthony Appiah, they were one of the means for "supporting the transmission of a complex and nuanced body of practice and belief". Adinkra iconography has been adapted into several segmental scripts, including • The
Adinkra Alphabet, invented by Charles Korankye in 2015, and expanded and refined over the next several years to accommodate various languages spoken in Ghana and Ivory Coast such as Akan,
Dagbani,
Ewe and
Ga- a process that culminated with the creation of a standardized font in 2020. •
Adinkra Nkyea, a writing system based on the Adinkra symbols.. Some Ghanaians use the Adinkra Nkyea writing system for the Akan Language and its dialects. A Majority of Adinkra Nkyea is derived from the original Adinkra Symbols. Adinkra Nkyea contains some 39 characters, ten numerals, and three punctuation marks.
Lusona Lusona is a system of ideograms that functioned as
mnemonic devices to record proverbs, fables, games, riddles and animals, and to transmit knowledge. They originate in what is now eastern
Angola, northwestern
Zambia and adjacent areas of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Modern orthographies East Africa • The
Luo script was developed to write
Dholuo in
Kenya in 2009. • Somalia: Writing systems developed in the twentieth century for transcribing Somali include the
Osmanya,
Gadabuursi (or Borama), and
Kaddare alphabets, which were invented by
Osman Yusuf Kenadid,
Sheikh Abdurahman Sheikh Nuur and
Hussein Sheikh Ahmed Kaddare, respectively. The Osmanya script is today available in the Unicode range 10480-104AF [from U+10480 - U+104AF (66688–66735)]. • An alphasyllabic
script for
Oromo in Ethiopia was invented in the late 1950s by Sheikh
Bakri Sapalo (1895-1980), and saw limited use. • An alphabetic script called Nilerian has been invented by Aleu Majok for
Dinka and other languages of South Sudan.
Southern Africa • In
Southern Africa, the
Mwangwego alphabet is used to write
Malawian languages. • IsiBheqe SoHlamvu (Bheqe Syllabary), also known as
Ditema tsa Dinoko, is a
featural syllabary used to write
Southern Bantu languages.
Central Africa • The
Bamum script was developed largely by
Sultan Ibrahim Njoya of the
Kingdom of Bamum in
Northwest Cameroon. It is a
semi-syllabary writing system that utilizes the
Bamum language. It is rarely used today, but a fair amount of material written in this script still exists. • The
Eghap script was used by the
Bagam (
Tuchscherer 1999, Rovenchak 2009) of Cameroon • The
Mandombe script was invented by
Wabeladio Payi in 1978 in what is now
Kongo Central province,
Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is promoted by the
Kimbanguist Church and used for writing
Kikongo,
Lingala,
Tshiluba,
Swahili, and other languages. •
Zaghawa (Beria) of
Darfur and
Chad, developed by Siddick Adam Issa from an earlier proposal by schoolteacher Adam Tajir based on traditional livestock brands.
West Africa There are various other writing systems native to
West Africa and
Central Africa. In the last two centuries, a large variety of writing systems have been created in Africa (Dalby 1967, 1968, 1969). Some are still in use today, while others have been largely displaced by non-African writing such as the
Arabic script and the
Latin script. Below are non-Latin and non-Arabic-based writing systems used to write various languages of Africa: • The
Adlam alphabet developed for writing the
Fula language, taught mostly in
Guinea but has also been spread in neighboring countries like
Senegal and
Gambia. • The
Ba script, named for its creator Adama Ba, used to write Fula. •
Bassa alphabet of
Liberia •
Bété syllabary of
Ivory Coast •
Dita, used to write Fula. •
Gbékoun script for
Fon and other
Languages of Benin. • Gola Script for
Liberia of
Liberia and
Guinea •
Loma syllabary of
Liberia and
Guinea •
Masaba, a syllabary invented by Woyo Couloubayi (c.1910-1982) in the early 1930s for the
Bambara language of Mali. •
Medefaidrin of the Obɛri Ɔkaimɛ Church for
Ibibio people. • The
Mende Ki-ka-ku or KiKaKui
syllabary, invented by
Kisimi Kamara in
Sierra Leone in the early 20th century. It is still used. •
Ńdébé, developed between 2009-2020 by Nigerian software engineer Lotanna Igwe-Odunze for the
Igbo language. •
N'Ko, invented in 1949 by
Solomana Kante in
Guinea, primarily for the
Manding languages. It is apparently in increasing use in
West Africa, including some efforts to adapt it to other languages (Wyrod 2008). • The
Nwagu Aneke syllabary invented in the 1950s for the
Igbo language of southeastern
Nigeria. • The
Oduduwa script of Benin and Nigeria, invented by Tolúlàṣẹ Ògúntósìn in 2016-2017 for the
Yoruba language • The Rainbow Oracle script invented by Aba Ota for the
Edo language in what is now
Benin during 1999. • The
Vai syllabary invented by
Mɔmɔlu Duwalu Bukɛlɛ for the
Vai language in what is now
Liberia during the early 19th century. It is still used today. • Yoruba Holy Writing for the texts of the
Yoruba religion.
North Africa Tifinagh (
Tuareg Berber language: ⵜⴼⵏⵗ; Neo-Tifinagh: ⵜⵉⴼⵉⵏⴰⵖ;
Berber Latin alphabet:
Tifinaɣ; Berber pronunciation:
[tifinaɣ]) is a script used to write the
Berber languages. Tifinagh is descended from the ancient
Libyco-Berber alphabet. The traditional Tifinagh, sometimes called
Tuareg Tifinagh, is still favored by the
Tuareg Berbers of the
Sahara desert in southern
Algeria, northeastern
Mali, northern
Niger and northern
Burkina Faso for use writing the
Tuareg Berber language.
Neo-Tifinagh is an alphabet developed by
Berber Academy to adopt Tuareg Tifinagh for use with
Kabyle; it has been since modified for use across North Africa. ==Introduced and adapted writing systems==