Imperial Aramaic

Armi Right-to-left Historical Abjad Middle Eastern

Sample Characters

𐡀 𐡁 𐡂 𐡃 𐡄 𐡅 𐡆 𐡇 𐡈 𐡉 𐡊 𐡋 𐡌 𐡍 𐡎 𐡏 𐡐 𐡑 𐡒 𐡓 𐡔 𐡕 𐡖 𐡗 𐡘 𐡙 𐡚 𐡛 𐡜 𐡝 𐡞 𐡟

First 48 characters from Imperial Aramaic (U+10840–U+1085F)

About Imperial Aramaic

Imperial Aramaic is a Historical writing system from the Middle Eastern region. It reads Right-to-left and contains 31 characters in the Unicode standard. It is registered in the ISO 15924 standard under the code Armi.

Data sourced from the ISO 15924 registry, Unicode CLDR, and the Unicode Character Database.

Frequently Asked Questions

What type of writing system is Imperial Aramaic?
Imperial Aramaic is an Abjad. Abjads write consonants only; vowels are absent or shown by optional diacritics.
What direction does Imperial Aramaic read?
Imperial Aramaic is written Right-to-left, meaning text flows from right to left. Words and sentences begin on the right side of the page.
How many languages use the Imperial Aramaic script?
0 languages use Imperial Aramaic according to Unicode CLDR data.
When was the Imperial Aramaic script created?
The Imperial Aramaic script originated around 800 BCE. It is now considered a historical script, no longer in active everyday use.

Compare Imperial Aramaic With Another Script

Direction, characters, languages — side by side.