Indian calligraphy
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Indian calligraphy is the Indian tradition of calligraphy. The art form has served multiple purposes since its inception in the second century BCE, including the duplication of religious texts and as a form of basic communication.
History
Early calligraphy (2nd century BCE-6th century CE)
Beginning in the 2nd century AD, Indic language was transferred using birch bark as a writing surface. Locally, the birch bark was called Bhojpatra in India - patra meaning leaf/bark/sheet in Sanskrit. Palm leaves were used as a substitute to paper, even after paper was available for Indic manuscripts. The leaves were commonly used because they were a good surface for pen writing, which created the delicate and decorative handwriting that is known as calligraphy today. Both sides of these leaves were used and they were stacked on top of each other. People then created holes on the leaves and held them together by string, thus creating the early Indian manuscripts, also common in Southeast Asia at the time.[1]
Middle Ages (6th century-16th century)
Indian calligraphy took off starting around 500 AD when Indian traders, colonists, military adventurers,
The languages of South East Asia were influenced by Indic language and culture. The languages that were created came in the form of the basic internal structure, the arrangement and construction of syllabic units, manner of representation of characters, and the direction of writing (left to right). Before this left to right reading, the technique of
From the 16th century onwards
Modern Period (16th century-today)
There was a bigger goal to this style of language than just to communicate with one another. There was no one true form of communication before this was created, and calligraphy helped to guide community members to connect in more than one aspect of life, that was not just language. A rich heritage of calligraphy was embraced as this was a time before printing technology was accessible to Indian counties. This brought people closer together as they began to communicate in the same ways. While it may be used as an art form today, it was essential for communication before the 16th century.[citation needed]
Features of Indian calligraphy
See also
References
- ^ Anderson, D.M. (2008). Indic Calligraphy. Encyclopedia Britannica.
- ISBN 0877734585.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link - ISBN 978-0195099843.
- ^ Mitter, Partha (2001). Indian Art. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. p. 100.
External links
- Devanagari script on Omniglot. This site also has information on a range of Indian scripts.
- Scripts and Languages of India