Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Isu script: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Jasca Ducato
Created page with "{{Era|Culture|TWCB}} {{Conjecture}} {{Imageneed}} {{Stub}} {{Quote|The walls told us of your coming. When we once were. Look at them. Are they not fascinating?" ''[…]''..."
 
imported>Jasca Ducato
Line 12: Line 12:


==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
*It is unknown whether the Isu script is an {{Wiki|alphabet}} or {{Wiki|logogram}} (i.e. whether each symbol represents a letter individual phonemes or a single word), but it is similar in look and style to {{Wiki|cuneiform script|cuneiform}}, the earliest known written script.
*It is unknown whether the Isu script is an {{Wiki|alphabet}} or {{Wiki|logogram}} (i.e. whether each symbol represents a letter, individual phonemes, or a single word), but it is similar in look and style to {{Wiki|cuneiform script|cuneiform}}, the earliest known written script.


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Revision as of 10:33, 20 June 2018

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination I wanted to ask you something. Which is... what's your name?
This article title is conjecture. Although the article subject is canon, no official name for it has been given.
Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Where are the paintings?

This article is in need of more images and/or better quality pictures from official media in order to achieve a higher status. You can help the Assassin's Creed Wiki by uploading better images on this page.

This article is a stub. You can help Assassin's Creed Wiki by expanding it.
"The walls told us of your coming. When we once were. Look at them. Are they not fascinating?" […] "These walls tell of a tragic story. A story we transcribed on our structures, on our artifacts. The stories written into the walls of these rooms. By whom, we never knew."
The Messenger, 48 BCE.[src]

The Isu script was a system of writing employed by the Isu.

Often used to decorate various Isu complexes and technologies, the script was used to tell the history of the Isu.[1] To this end, the script could be found written into the walls and floors of various locations and was often interspersed with other symbols.[2][3][4]

Despite its fall from use following the Great Catastrophe and the near-extinction of the Isu, the script continued to be recognised and used in a symbolic manner by a number of humans. Nostradamus notably used a number of characters from the Isu script to hide his Enigmas through Paris during the 16th century.[5]

Behind the scenes

  • It is unknown whether the Isu script is an alphabet or logogram (i.e. whether each symbol represents a letter, individual phonemes, or a single word), but it is similar in look and style to cuneiform, the earliest known written script.

Appearances

References