Aurebesh Wiki
Aurebesh Wiki
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The Aurebesh is a lot like Boba Fett—it is a facet of the Star Wars phenomenon that had its origin as a cinematic aside, but which has come to be widely embraced, far out of proportion to its humble origins.

—Stephen Crane[1]


Aurebesh is a fictional alphabet used to write Galactic Basic,[2] the Star Wars universe's version of English.

Aurebesh history

Aurebesh alphabet

The Star Wars alphabet that inspired the Aurebesh appears on screen for a span of mere seconds. That was enough time for me to notice them, though. As a graphic designer who worked (and still works) with fonts on a daily basis, I was intrigued by these glowing symbols on a Death Star readout.

—Stephen Crane, in October 2000[1]


EpVIDeathStar2

Aurebesh on Death Star monitor in Return of the Jedi

Aurebesh characters first appeared in the 1983 movie Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi, where they could be seen on multiple data screens, such as the monitor on the second Death Star when Darth Vader's shuttle is scanned while approaching the battle station in the beginning of the movie.[1]

This readout produces gibberish,[1] merely consisting of lines of character repeats.[3] Stephen Crane, an author and illustrator for West End Games (the publisher of Star Wars: The Roleplaying Game between 1987 and 1998), was the one who gave each character a name and a corresponding Roman letter or letter combination. While Crane was writing the 1994 rulebook Star Wars Miniatures Battles Companion, he decided to develop an alphabet for gamers to use and came up with "Aurebesh," a 34-letter alphabet. It was later expanded to include punctuation marks in Imperial Entanglements, a 1996 supplement to Star Wars Miniatures Battles.[1]

EpIVTractorBeam

Aurebesh on tractor beam control in the DVD release of A New Hope

Crane's alphabet was subsequently adopted in many Star Wars works, and even made its way into the prequel trilogy. Most notably, a variant appeared in the 1999 film Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace, on a readout screen of young Anakin Skywalker's starfighter.[1] As Skywalker heads toward the battle, the screen reads: "Anakin turn the ship around and go back home right away." Since the 2004 DVD release of Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, the words on the tractor beam control on the Death Star are now in Aurebesh.

EpIMessage

Message from R2-D2, The Phantom Menace

Since April, 2014, most stories in which Aurebesh appeared are part of Star Wars Legends, previously known as the Expanded Universe, and are therefore not canon.[4] However, as revealed in a "Ghost Crew Identification Card" available on the official site of Disney XD, the West End Games mapping of Aurebesh had been kept following the redefinition of canon, although the eight letters representing English digraphs were absent.[5] However, the letters representing digraphs were later included in a mapping in the 2015 children's book Star Wars Rebels: Battle Plans from Darth Vader and have appeared in Star Wars media such as the films Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens (on Dosmit Ræh's helmet, worn by Rey) and Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi (in the stolen stolen Star Yacht's catalog of starfighters for sale), the canon comic Chewbacca 1, and on Ketsu Onyo's helmet in the Star Wars Rebels episodes "Blood Sisters" and "The Forgotten Droid."

Aurebesh punctuation

When the next supplement was planned for Star Wars Miniatures Battles, I expanded the Aurebesh to include punctuation. Now it could be used to write whole sentences and paragraphs. The expanded Aurebesh appeared in Imperial Entanglements in 1996. Although it was primarily a scenario book for Star Wars Miniatures Battles, Imperial Entanglements included a Rules Upgrade section, and the revised alphabet fit right in.

—Stephen Crane, in October 2000[1]


The Crossing visor

Aurebesh parentheses and slashes on Tech's visor in the Star Wars: The Bad Batch episode "The Crossing," along with regular English colons and an English hyphen

Aurebesh punctuation, originally created for the Legends game accessory Star Wars Miniatures Battles,[1] is also used in Star Wars canon. For example, an apostrophe appears on the marquee outside Ziro's Palace in the animated film Star Wars: The Clone Wars, while an Aurebesh exclamation point can be seen in the inscription on the Republic gunship Spaceward Ho! in the Star Wars: The Clone Wars episodes "Storm Over Ryloth" and "Landing at Point Rain," and the animated film; in a Star Tours advertisement for Glee Anselm in "Lightsaber Lost," a sign for the Abafar Junior Dejarik Club in "Missing in Action," and on the poster The Sport's Greatest Rivalry in "The Rise of Clovis." In the Star Wars: The Bad Batch episode "The Crossing," a scan by Tech's visor results in a reading containing Aurebesh parentheses and slashes.

However, regular English punctuation, which does not match the one created by Stephen Crane, can also be seen in several episodes of Star Wars:The Clone Wars (such as full stops on the display on Cad Bane's security chip bomb in "Holocron Heist," the hologram projector in Lott Dod's library in "Senate Spy," Admiral Yularen's intelligence report in "Cat and Mouse," Ahsoka Tano's board in "The Academy," and the case files for Sifo-Dyas and his aide in "The Lost One") and Star Wars Rebels (such as full stops in an advertisement at Nixus Hub 218 in "Brothers of the Broken Horn," the dismantler droid's scopes in Star Wars Rebels: Steps Into Shadow, a set of blueprints aboard Tiber Saxon's Star Destroyer in Star Wars Rebels: Heroes of Mandalore, and a billboard in a cargo hold in "In the Name of the Rebellion"; while an English colon appears in the blueprint for the TIE/D Defender Elite in "Crawler Commandeers), as well as the aforementioned 2004 DVD release of A New Hope and all subsequent releases of the film.

Three stylized English exclamation points appear on the console of Freya Fenris' racing starfighter, the Red Ace, in the Star Wars Resistance episode "The Voxx Vortex 5000." In addition, when Kanan Jarrus breaks into Fenn Rau's Fang fighter in the Star Wars Rebels episode "The Protector of Concord Dawn," the monitor shows an Aurebesh exclamation point on top of an English one, and the aforementioned scan in Star Wars: The Bad Batch contains regular English colons and an English hyphen, even though the parentheses and slashes are all Aurebesh.

The ampersand (&) does not appear in any Star Wars mappings of Aurebesh; however, a fan-made ampersand, originally created for a fan-made font called Aurabesh,[6] appears in the Star Wars: The Bad Batch episode "Faster," where one of the advertisements at the Safa Toma Speedway says "T&J REPAIR". The font was originally developed by Mike E. Webb in 1996 and can be downloaded online.[6]

Alternate numerical system

I can't recall which came first, Stock Ships or Gamemaster Screen Revised, but I worked on both and both have that chart.

—Pablo Hidalgo on Twitter[7]


New Aurabesh numbers

Alternate Aurebesh numerals

Stephen Crane never created numbers for the Aurebesh alphabet, because the Death Star monitors in Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi show regular Arabic numerals.[1] However, an unrelated numerical system made up of dots and lines first appeared in the West End Games roleplaying sourcebook Platt's Starport Guide, which features a graphic called "Current transponder code profile," with the numerals along both axes of a graph. Unlike later appearances, numerals for 0 through 16 are represented. The same graphic is featured in the West End Games publication Star Wars Gamemaster Screen, Revised,[7] and re-appeared in the West End Games sourcebook Stock Ships.[7]

These numerals were digitized in a fan-made font known as New Aurabesh, which was created by Peter Schuster in 1998.[8] and can be downloaded online.[9] While the original West End Games sources represented numerals 0 through 16, later appearances of the numerals follow Schuster's designation, being limited to numerals 0 through 9.

Although most canon appearances of Aurebesh use Arabic numbers, the alternative West End Games numerals have also appeared in Star Wars media: 7189, a wall mural in the Capital City of Lothal, uses these numerals and can be seen in the Star Wars Rebels and first appears in the Star Wars Rebels short "Entanglement." The 2015 reference book Star Wars: The Force Awakens: The Visual Dictionary contains pictures of the rank insignia of the First Order, with alternate Aurebesh numbers appearing in the insignia for sergeant ("Ro 8") and squad leader ("Hal 4"). The "Hal 4" insignia can be seen on Lank Paze in the 2017 movie The Last Jedi, while the "Ro 8" insignia can be seen on Armitage Hux's First Order monitor in the same film. In another scene in the film, the databank of the Libertine, which DJ gains access to after he steals the Star Yacht in Canto Bight, uses these numerals to list prices in the owner's catalog of starfighters for sale.

Numerals Tipping Point

Alternative Aurebesh numerals on a monitor in the Marauder in the Star Wars: The Bad Batch episode "Tipping Point"

The 2017 reference book Star Wars: The Visual Encyclopedia presents an Aurebesh font which includes two examples of Aurebesh numbers; 3 and 7, both of which use West End Games' alternate font. During the raid on Kessel in the 2018 film Solo: A Star Wars Story, Qi'ra says, "They're in subsector four, coming up on gate X-3-7-1-K." The film then switches to a shot of Han Solo and Chewbacca coming out a door with a sign at the top, saying "D7 X371K", using the alternate numerals.

In The Mandalorian, the numbers numerals can be seen on the console aboard the Razor Crest, and first appear in "Chapter 2: The Child." As first seen in The Book of Boba Fett episode "Chapter 5: Return of the Mandalorian," the numbers 51 and 11 appear on a red monitor on the console of Din Djarin's N-1 starfighter, and on a small blue monitor on the opposite side of the console, which lists every number from 1 to 9. Curiously, the latter is upside-down. In The Mandalorian episode "Chapter 19: The Convert," the monitor on the control panel of a Six-O-Two Mitigator used by the New Republic Amnesty Program, lists every alternative numeral from 1 to 9, representing different voltage levels.

The numerals can also be seen on monitors in Daiyu spaceport in the Obi-Wan Kenobi episode "Part II" and on the blueprints of Fortress Inquisitorius in "Part IV." The numbers also appear in Star Wars: The Bad Batch. For example, the monitor in Riyo Chuchi's repulsorpod in the Imperial Senate in the Star Wars: The Bad Batch episode "Truth and Consequences" uses these numerals, although regular Aurebesh numbers are also seen. In the episode "The Crossing," Clone Force 99 member Tech uses a special visor to scan Cid's mine, resulting in "IPSIUM DETECTED", followed by a list of alternate numerals.

Dishabesh and Domabesh

It's called domabesh, and was made for Rogue One.

—Pablo Hidalgo[10]


Dishabesh

A representation of the Dishabesh font. Note that the letters J, Q, X, and Z have not yet been identified, and are therefore left blank.

Domabesh

A representation of the Domabesh font.

For the 2016 film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, two alternate Aurebesh fonts were created by the art department and were given the production names Dishabesh[11] and Domabesh.[10][11] The fonts were developed at the behest of director Gareth Edwards, who didn't want a Star Wars universe with just one form of text and mostly one font. Dishabesh was re-used for Enfys Nest's battle helmet in the film Solo: A Star Wars Story.[11]

Domabesh can be seen in Jedha City, on a Rebel MP's uniform, and Red Twelve's flight helmet, in Rogue One. In 2021, when asked on Twitter, Lucasfilm Story Group member Pablo Hidalgo referred to the script on Tam Posla's helmet (a character that was cut from the film, but appears in Star Wars: Rogue One: The Ultimate Visual Guide and makes a cameo in Solo, albeit from far away) as "Domabesh,"[10] but the name did not appear in canon until the 2024 reference book The Art of Star Wars Jedi: Survivor. According to Hidalgo, Domabesh is thought to be an archaic script, not as ancient as Ur-Kittât, but older than Aurebesh.[12]

See also

Wookieepedia Aurebesh on Wookieepedia

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Crane, Stephen (October 21, 2000). Aurebesh Soup: Recipe for a Star Wars Font Phenomenon. Echo Station. Archived from the original on May 20, 2016.
  2. Star Wars: The Visual Encyclopedia, p. 124
  3. What Does That Screen Say? The Discovery. Ericstormtrooper's Imperial Gallery (August 25, 2016).
  4. StarWars The Legendary Star Wars Expanded Universe Turns a New Page on StarWars.com (April 25, 2014): “In order to give maximum creative freedom to the filmmakers and also preserve an element of surprise and discovery for the audience, Star Wars Episodes VII-IX will not tell the same story told in the post-Return of the Jedi Expanded Universe. While the universe that readers knew is changing, it is not being discarded. Creators of new Star Wars entertainment have full access to the rich content of the Expanded Universe. For example, elements of the EU are included in Star Wars Rebels. The Inquisitor, the Imperial Security Bureau, and Sienar Fleet Systems are story elements in the new animated series, and all these ideas find their origins in roleplaying game material published in the 1980s.” (backup link)
  5. Rebel Resistance Kit. Disney XD. Archived from the original on May 7, 2016.
    Ghost Crew Identification Card (PDF). Disney XD. Archived from the original on November 24, 2015. “Translate Aurebesh (official Lothal language) using the guide on the back side of the card”
  6. 6.0 6.1 Aurabesh (free). Aurekfonts. Archived from the original on January 20, 2023.
    Twitter AurekFonts (@AurekFonts) on X, formerly Twitter: In 1996 Mike E Web created a fan font for Aurebesh, called "Aurabesh." (July 24, 2020). "https://aurekfonts.github.io/?font=Aurabesh Because this was created before the above punctuation was made, Web went ahead and added his own custom punctuation, including the first Aurebesh ampersand!" (backup link)
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Twitter Star Words (@HuttLang) on X, formerly Twitter: It's not "canon" but it’s an interesting progression (src: WEG sourcebook Stock Ships - an old @pabl0hidalgo joint) (June 10, 2022). "They appear to be an extension of Peter Schuster's tech numerals…" (backup link)
    Twitter AurekFonts (@AurekFonts) on X, formerly Twitter: We need to talk! This is the ORIGIN of those numerals, which Peter couldn't rembember and I have been searching for ever since!!! (June 10, 2022). (backup link)
    Twitter Star Words (@HuttLang) on X, formerly Twitter: Very cool! I found a few of the WEG books online and was “flipping” through them - small, but there they are! (June 10, 2022). (backup link)
    Twitter AurekFonts (@AurekFonts) on X, formerly Twitter: Peter said: A source book from West End Games, I believe? (June 10, 2022). "Yeah I think this was the main source for my creation. I never liked the number character of other sets, they just felt wrong to me, and although simple, I liked the design in that book." (backup link)
    Twitter Pablo Hidalgo (@pabl0hidalgo) on X, formerly Twitter: I can't recall which came first, Stock Ships or Gamemaster Screen Revised, but I worked on both and both have that chart. (June 10, 2022). (backup link)
  8. "New Aurabesh": A Casual Interview with Peter Schuster. Ko-fi (May 19, 2020). Archived from the original on May 9, 2022. “AF: You released "New Aurabesh" in 1998, just 2 years after Stephen Crane created Aurebesh for Star Wars Miniatures Battles, and well before it appeared in any movies. That means it's probably the 3rd Aurebesh font ever made, and the very first to use the "tech" style numbers. Today there are 7 times as many Aurebesh fonts on the web, and Aurebesh has appeared in 100s of movies, television series, books, comics, and amusement parks. How does it feel to be a small part of that legacy?
    PS: Star Wars Miniatures Battles from Stephen Crane? Thats the Source Book from West End Games, right? Yeah I think this was the main source for my creation. I never liked the number character of other sets, they just felt wrong to me, and although simple, I liked the design in that book.
  9. New Aurabesh (free). AurekFonts. Archived from the original on June 14, 2022.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Twitter Pablo Hidalgo (@pabl0hidalgo) on X, formerly Twitter: I recall now that Milvayne and the Milvayne Authority became this big thing in the comics, but really, the only reason Tam Posla is part of the Milvayne Authority was to explain the lettering 'MA' on his helmet, which is actually a nod to artist Matt Alsop's name. (May 30, 2021). (backup link)
    Twitter James Currie (@JimmyBhuna) on X, formerly Twitter: What alphabet is that? (May 30, 2021). (backup link)
    Twitter Pablo Hidalgo (@pabl0hidalgo) on X, formerly Twitter: It's called domabesh, and was made for Rogue One. (May 30, 2021). (backup link)
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Twitter Glyn Dillon (@glyn_dillon) on X, formerly Twitter: The fonts were made at Gareth's request for R.O. he didn't want a universe with just one text (and mostly one font). (March 27, 2019). "They were designed by the art dept graphics team. I was able to use them in any designs that needed text. Dishabesh just seemed to suit Enfys more than the others." (backup link; original post has been deleted)
    Twitter Alban Leloup (@LelalMekha) on X, formerly Twitter: Dishabesh, eh? That's the actual name they gave it? And the one in this picture is "Domabesh," right? (March 27, 2019). (backup link)
    Twitter Glyn Dillon (@glyn_dillon) on X, formerly Twitter: Correct (March 27, 2019). (backup link; original post has been deleted)
  12. Twitter goodmind (@a_goodmind) on X, formerly Twitter: How was Domabesh decided to be used for Exar Kun obsidian stone in Solo instead of McQuarrie script (Massassi script?), based on how the temple looks on McQuarrie concept art? (June 21, 2021). (backup link)
    Twitter Pablo Hidalgo (@pabl0hidalgo) on X, formerly Twitter: I don't know how that was decided; but I do know Domabesh is thought to be archaic, with its usage on Jedha. (June 21, 2021). "Not as ancient as the McQuarrie script, but much older than run-of-the-mill Aurebesh at least." (backup link)
This article is adapted from material from the "Aurebesh" article on the Star Wars wiki and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License.
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