Rustic capitals
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Folio14 recto of the Vergilius Romanus contains an author portrait of Virgil. |
Rustic capitals (in
Latin capitalis rustica) is an
ancient Roman calligraphic script.
Rustic capitals are similar to
Roman square capitals, but are less rigid, influenced more by pen and ink writing on
papyrus or
parchment than the writing used for
inscriptions. The letters are thinner and more compressed, use many more curved lines than do square capitals, and have
descenders extending below the baseline.
The script was used between the
1st century and the
9th century, most often between the
4th and
6th centuries. About fifty manuscripts with rustic capitals survive, including four copies of works by
Virgil (including the
Vergilius Vaticanus and the
Vergilius Romanus), one copy of a work by
Terence, and one of a work by
Prudentius. The script was usually used for
de luxe copies of pagan authors; the only works by Christian authors which use this script are those by Prudentius and
Sedulius.
After the
5th century, rustic capitals began to fall out of use, but they continued to be used as a display script in titles and headings, along with
uncial as the script of the main text.