Caucasian Albanian Alphabet
-
๐ฐ10530
-
๐ฑ10531
-
๐ฒ10532
-
๐ณ10533
-
๐ด10534
-
๐ต10535
-
๐ถ10536
-
๐ท10537
-
๐ธ10538
-
๐น10539
-
๐บ1053A
-
๐ป1053B
-
๐ผ1053C
-
๐ฝ1053D
-
๐พ1053E
-
๐ฟ1053F
-
๐10540
-
๐10541
-
๐10542
-
๐10543
-
๐10544
-
๐10545
-
๐10546
-
๐10547
-
๐10548
-
๐10549
-
๐1054A
-
๐1054B
-
๐1054C
-
๐1054D
-
๐1054E
-
๐1054F
-
๐10550
-
๐10551
-
๐10552
-
๐10553
-
๐10554
-
๐10555
-
๐10556
-
๐10557
-
๐10558
-
๐10559
-
๐1055A
-
๐1055B
-
๐1055C
-
๐1055D
-
๐1055E
-
๐1055F
-
๐10560
-
๐ก10561
-
๐ข10562
-
๐ฃ10563
Description
Caucasian Albanian alphabet was used by the Caucasian Albanians, one of the ancient and indigenous Northeast Caucasian peoples. Their territory comprised parts of present-day Azerbaijan, Georgia, and South Daghestan.
The script was created by Mesrop Mashtots. He was the Armenian monk, theologian and translator who is also believed to have created the Armenian script, with the help of an Albanian translator named Benjamin and an Albanian bishop named Ananias.
-
A
-
B
-
C
-
Carian
-
Caucasian Albanian
-
Chakma
-
Cham
-
Cherokee
-
Chinese Pinyin
-
Coptic
-
Cypriot syllabary
-
Cyrillic
-
Czech
-
-
D
-
E
-
F
-
G
-
H
-
I
-
J
-
K
-
L
-
M
-
N
-
O
-
P
-
R
-
S
-
T
-
U
-
V
-
Y