Lydian
European

script: Lydi
family: European
type: alphabet
whitespace: between words
open_type_tag: lydi
complex_positioning: unknown
unicode: true
status: Historical
baseline: bottom
ligatures: unspecified
direction: rtl
The Lydian script was used between 700 and 200 BC for writing the Lydian language, an ancient Indo-European language spoken in the modern-day Turkish provinces of Manisa and inland İzmir.
The Lydian script was an alphabet based on the Eastern Greek alphabet, although visually similar letters do not necessarily represent the same sounds in both scripts. Twenty-six sounds were represented in the script, some by more than one letter.
Early examples of Lydian writing are written both from left to right and from right to left. One is written in boustrophedon style. Later texts were written exclusively from right to left. Words were generally separated by spaces, although there is one text in which words are separated by dots.