What is the Carolingian Miniscule?

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1100373

2026-03-31 13:45

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Carolingian (or Caroline) miniscule was a script developed during the time of Charlemagne. From the 8th to the 12th century, it was used to produce classical texts, religious books and educational material. Seeking to come up with a unified script that would make the Roman alphabet more accessible to the literate, the developers formed the letters more clearly, using a style based on uncial scripts. Carolingian miniscule brought with it the use of capital letters and the tradition of separating Words with a space. It is considered the basis of modern typefaces. It was created by Alcuin of York.

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Good answer -- with two exceptions: the term is correctly Carolignian minuscule. The now common misspelling, miniscule, did not arrive until the 17th century, long after the era of the Carolignian minuscule.

You've also misspelled Carolignianas Carolingian. Even Wikipedia gets this wrong!

The adjective Carolignian derives from Charlemagne. Carolignian majuscules and minuscules were devised by the teacher-monk Alcuin in the late 8th century CE, the era of the emperor Charlemagne.

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