Working together over a period of several years, William Malandra and Emily Blanchard West put together a comprehensive suite of Avestan-script and transliteration fonts in the True Type format for the Windows platform. Modeled after some of the beautiful lead typefaces used in the 19th and early 20th centuries in India (differing from the font of Geldner's critical edition), they are closer to the orthography of authoritative manuscripts such as F1. They are an attractive and functional way to render Avestan or transliterated Avestan on the computer.
The samples you see below are displayed here as scanned images,
and therefore do not reflect the fonts’ actual screen or print
quality.
How to Download Fonts
Click on the "Download" links below each description. A "Save
as..." dialog box should appear. At this point it is easiest to
save the font directly to your Fonts folder (on an ordinary Windows
computer this will be located on the C drive inside the "Windows"
folder, i.e. C:\Windows\fonts). If you are trying to download an
extra copy, or an upgrade, however, it may be best to save it first
to the desktop and then move it to where you want it later. Once the
font has been copied to your Fonts folder, it will usually become
available for use in a few minutes, though sometimes it is necessary
to restart the computer first.
Fonts we have produced thus far include:
Jamaspa
Named after the son-in-law of the royal patron of Zarathustra, the Jamaspa font is the lighter and more elegant of our two main Avesta fonts, as seen here in this short text sample:
Click here to download Jamaspa.
Wistaspa
The Wistaspa font, named after Zarathustra's royal patron, is
heavier and more traditional:
Click here to download Wistaspa.
Hutaosa
The Hutaosa font is a version of Jamaspa
that has been modified to allow its insertion into a body of Roman
text without disrupting line spacing (leading). The long tails and
flourishes on Avestan letters normally require a very wide line space
to prevent overlap, and when scholarly or religious material in
English requires the citation of a word or line in Avestan, this can
result in unattractive gaps and breaks between lines.
Hutaosa is not suitable for rendering complete texts and passages, but it is
excellent for footnotes and small quotations. Hutaosa follows the
keyboard assignment pattern of our other Avestan
fonts, Jamaspa and Wistaspa,
and can be automatically transliterated with the Mithra
font and the Text Reverser.
Click here to download Hutaosa
Keyboard Equivalents Chart for
the Avesta-Script Fonts:
We have recently added the Pazand ell to the "\" key. A few
other letters and strokes which may sometimes prove useful have been
placed under the "alt" designation. To type these, make
sure your word processor is set to one of the Avesta fonts, and while
pressing the alt key, type the 4-number sequence listed below, and
the letter will appear.
Transliteration Font: Mithra
The Iranian solar and ethical deity Mithra was adopted by Roman
legions and translated into the Roman god Mithras. We have named our
font for transliterating Avestan into Roman script in his honor.
The Mithra font has been designed to work with the Jamaspa
and Wistaspa fonts to provide a simple
method for transliterating Avestan. Its character set is in exact
one-to-one correspondence with those of the other Avesta
fonts to allow automatic keystroke-for-keystroke
transliteration. For those who prefer Hoffmann's system of
transliteration, we have produced a second transliteration font and
named it in his honor.
The following keyboard chart (with
Wistaspa above and Mithra below) demonstrates the built-in
correspondence between Mithra/Hoffmann and the Avesta-script fonts.
Not only do all diacritics appear automatically when called for, but
when the proper transliteration of an Avestan letter requires a pair
of Roman letters, the paired letters are built into the
transliteration font:
This correspondence greatly reduces effort and typing time in many situations. It is also an effective learning tool for those who are not familiar with the Avestan script; you need only type in your text in transliteration, and changing the font will automatically produce a proper rendering of the text in the Avestan script. The Hoffmann font is identical in most respects to the Mithra font, except that all w's have been replaced with v's or uu's, and the dotted h is an accented x.
To take full advantage of the matched fonts, however, you must either have a word processor which can manage right-to-left typing, or download a copy of our Text Reverser (see the link at bottom of page), to compensate for the fact that Avestan is a right-to-left script. With the paired fonts and Text Reverser, producing dual copies of Avestan texts is easy. With a simple font change and text reversal, this:
Automatically becomes this:
Mithra and Hoffman each come in Regular, Bold, or Italic. Unfortunately, we
have not been able to make the fonts work with the "Bold"
and "Italic" commands on the computer, so they must be
selected as separate fonts from your font menu for them to give the
best possible appearance.
Click on the links to download the various versions of Mithra and Hoffman:
Mithra Plain: Download here Bold: Download here Italic: Download here |
Hoffmann |