Uncial script
Uncial is a majuscule script commonly used from the 4th to 8th centuries AD by Latin and Greek scribes. Uncial letters were used to write Greek, Latin, and Gothic.
Development
Early uncial script most likely developed from late Rustic capitals. Early forms are characterized by broad single-stroke letters using simple round forms taking advantage of the new parchment and vellum surfaces, as opposed to the angular, multiple-stroke letters, which are more suited for rougher surfaces, such as papyrus. In the oldest examples of uncial, such as the fragment of De bellis macedonicis in the British Library, of the late 1st-early 2nd century, all of the letters are disconnected from one another, and word separation is typically not used. Word separation, however, is characteristic of later uncial usage.As the script evolved over the centuries, the characters became more complex. Specifically, around AD 600, flourishes and exaggerations of the basic strokes began to appear in more manuscripts. Ascenders and descenders were the first major alterations, followed by twists of the tool in the basic stroke and overlapping. By the time the more compact minuscule scripts arose circa AD 800, some of the evolved uncial styles formed the basis for these simplified, smaller scripts. Uncial was still used, particularly for copies of the Bible, tapering off until around the 10th century. There are over 500 surviving copies of uncial script, by far the largest number prior to the Carolingian Renaissance.
Forms
In general, there are some common features of uncial script:- ,,,, are relatively narrow.
- , and are relatively broad; is formed with curved strokes, and is written as to distinguish it from and.
- is formed with a curved stroke, and its arm does not connect with the top curve; the height of the arm can also indicate the age of the script.
- has a small base, not extending to the right to connect with the next letter.
- has a long, curved shoulder, often connecting with the next letter.
- resembles the "long s" ; in uncial it looks more like than.
National styles
Due to its extremely widespread use, in Byzantine, African, Italian, French, Spanish, and "insular" centres, there were many slightly different styles in use:- African uncial is more angular than other forms of uncial. In particular, the bow of the letter is particularly sharp and pointed.
- Byzantine uncial has two unique features: "b-d uncial" uses forms of and, which are closer to half-uncial, and was in use in the 4th and 5th centuries; "b-r" uncial, in use in the 5th and 6th centuries, has a form of that is twice as large as the other letters, and an with a bow resting on the baseline and the stem extending below the baseline.
- Italian uncial has round letters with flatter tops, and with a sharp bow, an almost horizontal rather than vertical stem in, and forked finials.
- Insular uncial generally has definite word separation, and accent marks over stressed syllables, probably because Irish scribes did not speak a language descended from Latin. They also use specifically Insular scribal abbreviations not found in other uncial forms, use wedge-shaped finials, connect a slightly subscript "pendant " with or , and decorate the script with animals and dots.
- French uncial uses thin descenders, an with lines that cross higher than the middle, and a with a curled stem, and there are many decorations of fish, trees, and birds.
- Cyrillic manuscript developed from Greek uncial in the late ninth century, and was originally used to write the Old Church Slavonic liturgical language. The earlier form was called ustav, and later developed into semi-ustav script.
Etymology
In classical Latin uncialis could mean both "inch-high" and "weighing an ounce", and it is possible that Jerome was punning on this; he may conceivably also have been playing with the other meaning of codex, "block of wood".
The term uncial in the sense of describing this script was first used by Jean Mabillon in the early 18th century. Thereafter his definition was refined by Scipione Maffei, who used it to refer to this script as distinct from Roman square capitals.
The official name of the script in Latin is Littera Uncialis, literally "Handwriting Uncial".
Other uses
The word, uncial, is also sometimes used to refer to manuscripts that have been scribed in uncial, especially when differentiating from those penned with minuscule. Some of the most noteworthy Greek uncials are:- Codex Sinaiticus
- Codex Vaticanus
- Codex Alexandrinus
- : – these being three of what are often called the four great uncial codices
- Codex Bezae
- Codex Petropolitanus Purpureus
For further details on these manuscripts, see Guglielmo Cavallo Ricerche sulla Maiuscola Biblica.
Modern calligraphy usually teaches a form of evolved Latin-based uncial hand that would probably be best compared to the later 7th to 10th century examples, though admittedly, the variations in Latin uncial are much wider and less rigid than Greek. Modern uncial has borrowed heavily from some of the conventions found in more cursive scripts, using flourishes, variable width strokes, and on occasion, even center axis tilt.
In a way comparable to the continued widespread use of the blackletter typefaces for written German until well into the 20th century, Gaelic letterforms, which are similar to uncial letterforms, were conventionally used for typography in Irish until the 1950s. The script is still widely used in this way for titles of documents, inscriptions on monuments, and other 'official' uses. Strictly speaking, the Gaelic script is insular, not uncial. Uncial Greek is commonly used by the Greek Orthodox Church and various institutions and individuals in Greece to this day. The Modern Greek State has also used uncial script on several occasions in official capacity as did many of the Greek provisional governments during the Greek War of Independence. The height of uncial usage by the Modern Greek State was during the Greek military junta of 1967–74, when even Greek Drachma coins had uncial lettering on them. Since the Metapolitefsi, the Greek State has stopped using uncial script.
Half-uncial
The term half-uncial or semi-uncial was first deployed by Scipione Maffei, Istoria diplomatica ; he used it to distinguish what seemed like a cut-down version of uncial in the famous Codex Basilicanus of Hilary, which contains sections in each of the two types of script. The terminology was continued in the mid-18th century by René Prosper Tassin and Charles François Toustain.Despite the common and well-fixed usage, half-uncial is a poor name to the extent that it suggests some organic debt to regular uncial, though both types share features inherited from their ancient source, capitalis rustica.
It was first used around the 3rd century and remained in use until the end of the 8th century. The early forms of half-uncial were used for pagan authors and Roman legal writing, while in the 6th century the script came to be used in Africa and Europe to transcribe Christian texts.
Half-uncial forms
Some general forms of half-uncial letters are:- is usually round, sometimes with a slightly open top
- and have vertical stems, identical to the modern letters
- has a flat top, no bow, and a curved descender
- has a curved shaft
- ,, and are similar to their uncial counterparts