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Sep 18, 2024 · Square Hebrew became established in the 2nd and 1st centuries bce and developed into the modern Hebrew alphabet over the next 1,500 years. It was apparently derived from the Aramaic alphabet rather than from Early Hebrew but was nonetheless strongly influenced by the Early Hebrew script.
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- Classical Hebrew Alphabet
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- Merubbaʿ Script
The Hebrew alphabet (Hebrew: אָלֶף־בֵּית עִבְרִי, Alefbet ivri), known variously by scholars as the Ktav Ashuri, Jewish script, square script and block script, is an abjad script used in the writing of the Hebrew language and other Jewish languages, most notably Yiddish, Ladino, Judeo-Arabic, and Judeo-Persian. In modern Hebrew, vowels are increasingly introduced.
The history of the Hebrew alphabet is not to be confused with the history of the Paleo-Hebrew alphabet, so called not because it is ancestral to the Hebrew alphabet but because it was used to write the earliest form of the Hebrew language. "Paleo-Hebrew alphabet" is the modern term (coined by Solomon Birnbaum in 1954 [1]) used for the script ...
Modern Hebrew. Derived out of the later Hebrew alphabet is the Modern Hebrew alphabet, which began around the 11th Century A.D. The Masoretic Hebrew texts of the Bible, written in the 11th Century, used this script and have changed very little to the present day. Text from an 11th Century Masoretic Hebrew Bible Text from a Modern Hebrew Bible
After Hebrew went extinct about 300 BC a fourth Hebrew alphabet was invented by the Masoretes in 600-900 AD that added vowels for the first time. This fourth Hebrew alphabet is known as “Masoretic Hebrew” and is used today in modern Israel starting in 1915 AD when the population mass converted from Germain language (Yiddish) to Hebrew.
Modern Hebrew is written from right to left using the Hebrew alphabet, which is an abjad, or consonant-only script of 22 letters based on the "square" letter form, known as Ashurit (Assyrian), which was developed from the Aramaic script.
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Oct 25, 2017 · The most optimistic estimations situate the earliest Old Hebrew Dead Sea scrolls in the fifth or fourth century B.C.E. See Salomo A. Birnbaum, The Hebrew Scripts (Leiden: Brill, 1971), col. 64–70; Michael Langlois, “Dead Sea Scrolls Paleography and the Samaritan Pentateuch,” in Michael Langlois, ed.,