ʼPhags-pa script

The Phagspa script or ʼPhags-pa script is an alphabet designed by the Tibetan monk and State Preceptor (later Imperial Preceptor) Drogön Chögyal Phagpa for Kublai Khan, the founder of the Yuan dynasty, as a unified script for the written languages within the Yuan. The actual use of this script was limited to about a hundred years during the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty, and it fell out of use with the advent of the Ming dynasty.

Phagspa script
ꡏꡡꡃꡣꡡꡙꡐꡜꡞ
ḥPʻags-pa
Christian tombstone from Quanzhou dated 1314, with inscription in the ʼPhags-pa script ꞏung shė yang shi mu taw 'tomb memorial of Yang Wengshe'
Script type
CreatorDrogön Chögyal Phagpa
Time period
1269 c.1660
DirectionVertical left-to-right 
Languages
Related scripts
Parent systems
Child systems
Zanabazar's square, Hangul?
Sister systems
Lepcha, Meitei, Khema, Marchen
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Phag (331), Phags-pa
Unicode
Unicode alias
Phags-pa
U+A840–U+A87F
The theorised Semitic origins of the Brahmi script are not universally agreed upon.

It was used to write and transcribe varieties of Chinese, the Tibetic languages, Mongolian, the Uyghur language, Sanskrit, probably Persian, and other neighboring languages during the Yuan era. For historical linguists, the documentation of its use provides clues about the changes in these languages.

Its descendant systems include Horizontal square script, used to write Tibetan and Sanskrit. There is a theory that the Korean Hangul alphabet had a limited influence from ʼPhags-pa (see Origin of Hangul). During the Pax Mongolica the script has even made numerous appearances in western medieval art.

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