DescriptionNew Roman Cursive i longum, 6th century.png
English: Examples of long i in 6th-century New Roman Cursive, taken from legal documents sampled in Franz Steffens' Lateinische Paläographie (1903).
The top is from a Ravenna document, and reads: quantum s(upra)s(cripto) emptori interfuerit, with the long i marked in bold. The bottom is from a fragment of a Latin translation of Flavius Josephus' Jewish Antiquities, and reads: tenentes igitur palestini.
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Captions
Examples of long i in 6th-century New Roman Cursive, from Steffens' Lateinische Paläographie.