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  1. Alfabeto protosinaítico. La escritura protosinaítica se considera el primer alfabeto consonántico documentado, extendiéndose su uso desde el siglo XVIII hasta el siglo XVI a. C. Sus primeros testimonios fueron hallados por William Matthew Flinders Petrie en el invierno de 1904-1905, en la península del Sinaí.

  2. Description. Before, during, and after the existence of the ancient Berber kingdoms of Numidia (northern Algeria, 202 BC–40 BC) and Mauretania (northern Morocco, 3rd century BC – 44 AD) many inscriptions were engraved using the Libyco-Berber script, although the overwhelming majority of the found ones were simple funerary scripts, with rock art, cave art, graffiti, and even a few official ...

  3. This is the Wadi el-Hol material. the "Proto-Sinaitic" or "Proto-Semitic" scripts of the Late Bronze Age. These are something like the earliest standardised alphabetic writing, ancestral to both Canaanite and South Arabian scripts. the "Proto-Canaanite" scripts from the eve of the Bronze Age collapse.

  4. Proto-Canaanite and Proto-Sinaitic are two different things (a reconstruction on the one hand, and an undeciphered script on the other). I created a Middle Bronze Age alphabets article for Proto-Sinaitic/Wadi el-Hol, and removed them from this article. -- kwami 12:04, 30 Apr 2005 (UTC) I'm going to remove the letters.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cham_scriptCham script - Wikipedia

    The Cham script is a descendant of the Brahmi script of India. [3] Cham was one of the first scripts to develop from a script called the Pallava script some time around 200 CE. It came to Southeast Asia as part of the expansion of Hinduism and Buddhism. Hindu stone temples of the Champa civilization contain both Sanskrit and Chamic language ...

  6. 5. All West Semitic alphabets (emerging after Proto-Canaanite) utilize the abstracted forms but Old Negev retains in use a very large number of archaic forms (i.e. Proto-Sinaitic and Proto-Canaanite forms). 6. Old Negev also retains an elaborate use of ligatures to create symbols that often complement or enhance the inscriptions.

  7. Proto-Sinaitic script. Articles relating to the Proto-Sinaitic script (c. 19th century BCE) and to writing systems derived from it.