Passage du Fleuve
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Passage-du-Fleuve.ttf
Stichworte
Zeichentabelle
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Standard Schriftarten Information
Urheberrechte
© 2002 Daniel U. Thibault. All Rights Reserved.
Schriftfamilie
Passage du Fleuve
Schriftunterfamilie
Regular
Einzigartige Unterfamilieidentifikation
Urhixidur:Passage du Fleuve Regular:2002
Vollständiger Schriftname
Passage du Fleuve
Name-Tabelle Version
Version 1.00; 2002 August 28
Postscript-Schriftbezeichnung
Passage_du_Fleuve
Hersteller
Designer
Daniel U. Thibault
Beschreibung
Passage du Fleuve 2002 1.00
A medieval (circa XIIth-XVth century) occult script derived from Hebrew. The French name means "Passing the River" and is probably an allusion to Deuteronomy, Chapter II, Verses 13-16, where Moses leads Israel across the river Zered into Canaan. With the Celestial and Malachim/Angelic/Royal scripts, it forms the Seraphic family of scripts. It is currently used by some Wiccan practitioners.
Passage du Fleuve is included by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa in Book III (Ceremonial Magic), Chapter XXX («Another manner of making Characters, delivered by Cabalists») of his De Occulta Philosophia (written in 1509 and first printed in 1533), unfortunately without mentioning any details. Francis Barrett derived the alphabet from Agrippa, along with much of the text of Agrippa's book, and presented it in his «The Magus: A Complete System of Occult Philosophy», published in 1801.
A medieval (circa XIIth-XVth century) occult script derived from Hebrew. The French name means "Passing the River" and is probably an allusion to Deuteronomy, Chapter II, Verses 13-16, where Moses leads Israel across the river Zered into Canaan. With the Celestial and Malachim/Angelic/Royal scripts, it forms the Seraphic family of scripts. It is currently used by some Wiccan practitioners.
Passage du Fleuve is included by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa in Book III (Ceremonial Magic), Chapter XXX («Another manner of making Characters, delivered by Cabalists») of his De Occulta Philosophia (written in 1509 and first printed in 1533), unfortunately without mentioning any details. Francis Barrett derived the alphabet from Agrippa, along with much of the text of Agrippa's book, and presented it in his «The Magus: A Complete System of Occult Philosophy», published in 1801.
Erweiterte Schriftarten Information
Unterstützte Plattformen
PlattformKodierung
UnicodeUnicode 1.0 Semantik
MacintoshWestliche (römische)
MicrosoftNur BMP Unicode
Schriftdetails
Kreiert2002-08-17
Änderung1
Zeichenzahl248
Einheiten pro Em2048
Einbindungs RechteEinbindung für Bearbeiten zulässig
Familien GattungSymbolisch
StärkeMittlere
BreiteMittel
Mac StyleFett
RichtungNur stark von Links nach Rechts gehende Schriftzeichen + enthält
Muster BeschaffenheitRegelmäßig
AbstandUngleicher Abstand