African scripts

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Last weekend, a Kenyan made the news by announcing he had developed an indigenous script for the Luo language. In no time, #WritingLuo was the top trending topic in Kenya on Twitter.

The developer, Kefa Ombewa, said he was out to “de-Latinise” the Luo language, arguing that African languages needed indigenous symbols to express their nuances that the Roman alphabet simply cannot capture.

Reception on social media so far has largely treated the development of the script as just another flamboyant curiosity, but could Ombewa be on to something?

The desire to express African languages in locally developed symbols has been strong through the decades. Written language embodies historical identity and cultural power—thus when Israel became a state in 1948, it revived the Hebrew language from near-oblivion, not just as a tool of unifying modern Jews, but also as a political symbol of their claim of a connection to ancient Israel.

Today, most African languages are written in the Latin or Arabic alphabets.

However, Latin and Arabic themselves developed from ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics. Despite the modern diversity of writing systems, historians believe that ancient writing developed independently in only four places—Egypt, Iran/Iraq, China, and Mesoamerica (the cultural area in the Americas, extending approximately from central Mexico to Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica).

Ge’ez in the mix
All other scripts are derivatives or influences of these four: For example, Arabic is derived from ancient writing in Iran/Iraq; Japanese and Korean and derived from Chinese, and Latin alphabet is derived from ancient Greek, which adopted its alphabet from Egyptian hieroglyphics.

Thus it could be argued that European languages today are written in script derived from Africa—not the other way around.

Although Africa is known for its oral traditions, there have also been several indigenous African writing systems, some of which are still in use today.

Used in Ethiopia and Eritrea, Ge’ez is the only native African script taught in school today used widely in everyday interactions. Dating back to the 9th century BC, Ge’ez itself is an extinct language, much like Latin, only used in the liturgy of the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox churches.

But the Ge’ez script is used to write Amharic, Tigrinya, Tigre and most other languages of Ethiopia and Eritrea. And with a population of over 90 million residing in those two countries, Ge’ez is the most successful native African script today.

Ge’ez probably developed over the course of several centuries. But another native African script, Vai in Liberia and Sierra Leone, is credited to one man, who invented the Vai writing system in the 1830s, a Liberian named Momolu Duwalu Bukele.

It is said the script was revealed to him in a dream, though it is more likely that the Cherokee syllabary in North America provided a model for the design of Vai writing. At the time, many Cherokee had migrated to Liberia in the early 1830s, just at the time when Cherokee itself was developing its written script.

Cameroon’s Bamum
Another script developed in modern times is the Bamum script, invented by King Ibrahim Njoya, the 17th king of the Bamum of West Cameroon in 1896. The script, also named A-ka-u-ku after its first four letters, is rarely used today, but a fair amount of material written in this script still exists.

But King Njoya’s grandson and current sultan of Bamum, Ibrahim Mbombo Njoya, has since transformed his palace into a school to re-teach the Bamum script, initiating The Bamum Scripts and Archives Project in 2005 to bring it back from the brink of extinction.

Further south in Malawi is the Mwangwego alphabet developed in 1977 for Malawian languages by Nolence Mwangwego. But it is not used widely in everyday interactions. Other African scripts, such as Nubian and Meroitic, have fallen into disuse and are considered extinct.

But most African languages today, particularly south of the Sahara, are written using the Latin alphabet. This presents many difficulties in expressing some sounds that are not found in European languages.

In the 1960s and 1970s, UNESCO hosted several “expert meetings” on the subject, including a seminal meeting in Bamako in 1966, and one in Niamey in 1978, where a standard African alphabet—using Latin letters but incorporating many other non-Latin sounds—was proposed. But it is yet to be widely adopted.

http://mgafrica.com/article/2014-06...bet-only-ethiopia-and-eritrea-are-in-the-game
 

newworldafro

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But another native African script, Vai in Liberia and Sierra Leone, is credited to one man, who invented the Vai writing system in the 1830s, a Liberian named Momolu Duwalu Bukele.

It is said the script was revealed to him in a dream, though it is more likely that the Cherokee syllabary in North America provided a model for the design of Vai writing. At the time, many Cherokee had migrated to Liberia in the early 1830s, just at the time when Cherokee itself was developing its written script.


The Cherokee went to Liberia and created an alphabet ... :mindblown: ..... :dwillhuh: ...... I've never ever heard anything remotely like this .... that's crazy ...........




Needs a movie ..... good article :ehh:

I've alway wondered about that with tribal languages being outbidded more more broader spoken languages how they were going to preserve them in a modern age. This is interesting though
 
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Yeah the mail and guardian Africa site has a lot of gems. I posted the link to site at the bottom of the article.
 

thekyuke

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Last weekend, a Kenyan made the news by announcing he had developed an indigenous script for the Luo language. In no time, #WritingLuo was the top trending topic in Kenya on Twitter.

The developer, Kefa Ombewa, said he was out to “de-Latinise” the Luo language, arguing that African languages needed indigenous symbols to express their nuances that the Roman alphabet simply cannot capture.

Reception on social media so far has largely treated the development of the script as just another flamboyant curiosity, but could Ombewa be on to something?

The desire to express African languages in locally developed symbols has been strong through the decades. Written language embodies historical identity and cultural power—thus when Israel became a state in 1948, it revived the Hebrew language from near-oblivion, not just as a tool of unifying modern Jews, but also as a political symbol of their claim of a connection to ancient Israel.

Today, most African languages are written in the Latin or Arabic alphabets.

However, Latin and Arabic themselves developed from ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics. Despite the modern diversity of writing systems, historians believe that ancient writing developed independently in only four places—Egypt, Iran/Iraq, China, and Mesoamerica (the cultural area in the Americas, extending approximately from central Mexico to Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica).

Ge’ez in the mix
All other scripts are derivatives or influences of these four: For example, Arabic is derived from ancient writing in Iran/Iraq; Japanese and Korean and derived from Chinese, and Latin alphabet is derived from ancient Greek, which adopted its alphabet from Egyptian hieroglyphics.

Thus it could be argued that European languages today are written in script derived from Africa—not the other way around.

Although Africa is known for its oral traditions, there have also been several indigenous African writing systems, some of which are still in use today.

Used in Ethiopia and Eritrea, Ge’ez is the only native African script taught in school today used widely in everyday interactions. Dating back to the 9th century BC, Ge’ez itself is an extinct language, much like Latin, only used in the liturgy of the Ethiopian and Eritrean Orthodox churches.

But the Ge’ez script is used to write Amharic, Tigrinya, Tigre and most other languages of Ethiopia and Eritrea. And with a population of over 90 million residing in those two countries, Ge’ez is the most successful native African script today.

Ge’ez probably developed over the course of several centuries. But another native African script, Vai in Liberia and Sierra Leone, is credited to one man, who invented the Vai writing system in the 1830s, a Liberian named Momolu Duwalu Bukele.

It is said the script was revealed to him in a dream, though it is more likely that the Cherokee syllabary in North America provided a model for the design of Vai writing. At the time, many Cherokee had migrated to Liberia in the early 1830s, just at the time when Cherokee itself was developing its written script.

Cameroon’s Bamum
Another script developed in modern times is the Bamum script, invented by King Ibrahim Njoya, the 17th king of the Bamum of West Cameroon in 1896. The script, also named A-ka-u-ku after its first four letters, is rarely used today, but a fair amount of material written in this script still exists.

But King Njoya’s grandson and current sultan of Bamum, Ibrahim Mbombo Njoya, has since transformed his palace into a school to re-teach the Bamum script, initiating The Bamum Scripts and Archives Project in 2005 to bring it back from the brink of extinction.

Further south in Malawi is the Mwangwego alphabet developed in 1977 for Malawian languages by Nolence Mwangwego. But it is not used widely in everyday interactions. Other African scripts, such as Nubian and Meroitic, have fallen into disuse and are considered extinct.

But most African languages today, particularly south of the Sahara, are written using the Latin alphabet. This presents many difficulties in expressing some sounds that are not found in European languages.

In the 1960s and 1970s, UNESCO hosted several “expert meetings” on the subject, including a seminal meeting in Bamako in 1966, and one in Niamey in 1978, where a standard African alphabet—using Latin letters but incorporating many other non-Latin sounds—was proposed. But it is yet to be widely adopted.

http://mgafrica.com/article/2014-06...bet-only-ethiopia-and-eritrea-are-in-the-game

Actually the Vai and Bamum scripts are much older. Fyi,wiki is a poor source for anything especially blackman history. There's also Kikuyu ideographs,called gicandi much used till the mid 1900s I'll post later.
 
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Actually the Vai and Bamum scripts are much older. Fyi,wiki is a poor source for anything especially blackman history. There's also Kikuyu ideographs,called gicandi much used till the mid 1900s I'll post later.
Wiki wasn't the source the source is posted t the bottom. Perhaps you should work on your basic English before giving lessons.
 

wheywhey

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I don't see this going anywhere. Only about 40% of Kenyans attend secondary school. Luos are just above 10% of the population. While I can see this being of interest to those in academia, I don't see any benefit to the general public.
 

Dada

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I'll have to check this out. I learned N'ko a few years ago and will eventually learn Mandombe.
 

thekyuke

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I don't see this going anywhere. Only about 40% of Kenyans attend secondary school. Luos are just above 10% of the population. While I can see this being of interest to those in academia, I don't see any benefit to the general public.
Dude,you have stats??
 

emoney

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Most African languages are written in Latin or Arabic because those are the people who conquered us. (Europeans and Semites)

For the most part, we were an oral people.

We did however use art and ideograms to represent ideas and concepts.
 

thekyuke

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Wiki wasn't the source the source is posted t the bottom. Perhaps you should work on your basic English before giving lessons.

I repeat,the Mail and Guardian is part of the AngloJewish MSM. Apart from reinforcing inaccuracies and deliberate distortion especially on such a topic it exists to construct the dominant narratives required by the Global Elites.

For research on such an issue this link would've been ideal:http://africancivilizations.wordpress.com/2012/03/24/ancient-writing-in-middle-africa/
Winters (1977,1979) discovered that the Vai syllabary of 200 characters matched all the signs in the syllabaries of Crete, Olmec America, Oracle Bone writing of China and the Harappan script (Winters 1979,1983b,1983c). And that due to the genetic linguistic unity of the people who made these signs, when you gave the signs in these diverse areas, the phonetic values of the Vai signs, but read them in the Dravidian or Manding language
You can estimate the of of Vai and other African scripts with the bolded part.
Here's the Kikuyu ideography,gicandi I mentioned last week.
image0001.jpg


Translation-click to expand.
image0003.jpg


http://karanjazplace.blogspot.com/2012/08/inside-kikuyu-complex.html
It was widespread a century ago and was considered a degeneration of a true alphabetic script by some.
 
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