The origin of Brahmi script English
Material type:
- 411.0954 G9597 O 7004
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Chinmaya International Foundation General Stacks | General | 411.0954 G9597 O 7004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 7004 |
The antiquity of writing in India can be traced back to the still undeciphered ideo-or pictograms on the seals and sealings of the Indus Civilization. Between this and the prolific rock and pillar engravings of Asoka in the Brahmi script there is a gaping hiatus of a millennium and more in the history of writing in India. What is the origin of this Brahmi script which Asoka utilized at its maximum for the propagation of the Dhamma? What are its anticedents, if any? are the vexed problems defying solution? Here, two prominent scholars, a historian and an archaeologist, have put forth their views in two key-papers. To S.R. Goyal, the historian, Brahmi was invented in the first half of the third century B.C., to be exact during Asokas time, gaining support for his theory from Megasthanes observation that there was no writing in India in his times. Further, Brahmi does not show any regional variation and most of its form appear to have been based on primary shapes representing some material objects. On the other hand, to the archaeologist, Soundara Rajan, there is a possibility that Brahmi passed through a stage of evolution from the Vedic-Brahmanical culture-stream flowering after the Vedic Culture had absorbed non-Vedic tradition and also had imbibed maritime script-impulses. He is of the opinion that in the pre-Mauryan period, between Panini and the Buddha Brahmi should have attained a standardized shape as borne out by its structure which is inspired by the Paninian grammar. To him, Brahmi is not an instant miracle but was dormant for want of actual writ
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