Old Turkic script

Old Turkic script
Orkhon script
A line dedicated to Bumin Qaghan in the Ongin inscription
Script type
Alphabet
Period
8th to 10th centuries
DirectionRight-to-left script 
LanguagesOld Turkic
Related scripts
Child systems
Old Hungarian
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Orkh (175), Old Turkic, Orkhon Runic
Unicode
Unicode alias
Old Turkic
U+10C00U+10C4F
Location of the Orkhon Valley in Asia

The Old Turkic script (also known variously as Göktürk script, Orkhon script, Orkhon-Yenisey script, Turkic runes) was the alphabet used by the Göktürks and other early Turkic khanates from the 8th to 10th centuries to record the Old Turkic language.

The script is named after the Orkhon Valley in Mongolia, where early 8th-century inscriptions were discovered in an 1889 expedition by Nikolai Yadrintsev. These Orkhon inscriptions were published by Vasily Radlov and deciphered by the Danish philologist Vilhelm Thomsen in 1893.

This writing system was later used within the Uyghur Khaganate. Additionally, a Yenisei variant is known from 9th-century Yenisei Kyrgyz inscriptions, and it has likely cousins in the Talas Valley of Turkestan and the Old Hungarian alphabet of the 10th century. Words were usually written from right to left.