Pilcrow


The pilcrow, , also called the paragraph mark, paragraph sign, paraph, alinea, or blind P, is a typographical character for individual paragraphs.
The pilcrow may also be used as an indent for separate paragraphs or to designate a new paragraph in one long piece of copy, as Eric Gill did in his 1931 book An Essay on Typography. The pilcrow was a type of rubrication used in the Middle Ages to mark a new train of thought, before the convention of visually discrete paragraphs was commonplace.
The pilcrow is usually drawn similar to a lowercase reaching from descender to ascender height; the loop can be filled or unfilled. It may also be drawn with the bowl stretching further downwards, resembling a backwards ; this is more often seen in older printing.

Origin and name

The word pilcrow originates from the Greek word paragraphos. This was rendered in Old French as paragraphe and later changed to pelagraphe. The earliest reference of the modern pilcrow is in 1440 with the Middle English word pylcrafte.
The first way to divide sentences into groups in Ancient Greek was the original paragraphos, which was a horizontal line in the margin to the left of the main text. As the paragraphos became more popular, the horizontal line eventually changed into the Greek letter Gamma and later into litterae notabiliores, which were enlarged letters at the beginning of a paragraph. This notation soon changed to the letter, an abbreviation for the Latin word kaput, which translates as "head", i.e. it marks the head of a new thesis. Eventually, to mark a new section, the Latin word capitulum, which translates as "little head", was used, and the letter came to mark a new section in 300 BC.
In the 1100s, had completely replaced as the symbol for a new chapter. Rubricators eventually added one or two vertical bars to the to stylize it ; the symbol was filled in with dark ink and eventually looked like the modern pilcrow, ¶.

Modern use

Scribes would often leave space before paragraphs to allow rubricators to draw the pilcrow. With the introduction of the printing press, space before paragraphs was still left for rubricators to draw by hand; however, rubricators could not draw fast enough for printers and often would leave the beginnings of the paragraphs as blank. This is how the indent before paragraphs was created. Nevertheless, the pilcrow remains in use in modern time in the following ways:
The pilcrow is used in desktop publishing software such as desktop word processors and page layout programs to mark the presence of a carriage return control character at the end of a paragraph. It is also used as the icon on a toolbar button that shows or hides the pilcrow and similar hidden characters, including tabs, whitespace, and page breaks. In typing programs, it marks a return that one must type.
The pilcrow may indicate a footnote in a convention using a sequence of distinct typographic symbols in sequence to distinguish the footnotes on a given page; it is the sixth in a series of footnote symbols beginning with the asterisk.

Encoding

The pilcrow character was in the 1984 Multinational Character Set extension of ASCII at 0xB6, from where it was inherited by ISO/IEC 8859-1 and thence by Unicode as. In addition, Unicode also defines,, and. The capitulum character is obsolete, being replaced by pilcrow, but is included in Unicode for backward compatibility and historic studies.
Historically, the pilcrow symbol was included in the default hardware codepage 437 of IBM PCs at code point 20, sharing its position with the ASCII control code DC4.

Keyboard entry

Depending on the font used, this character varies in appearance and, exceptionally, may be replaced by an alternate glyph entirely.

Paragraph signs in non-Latin writing systems

In Chinese, the traditional paragraph sign is a thin circle about the same size as a Chinese character. This same mark also serves as a "zero" character, as a stylistic variation of the Chinese character for "zero". As a paragraph sign, this mark only appears in older books, commonly found in the Chinese Union Version of the Bible. Its current use is generally as a "zero" character. However, it can also be found in some editions of the King James Bible and the Book of Mormon.
In Thai, the character can mark the end of a chapter or document.
In Sanskrit and other Indian languages, text blocks used to be written in stanzas. Two vertical bars were the functional equivalent of a pilcrow.