The Cyrillic alphabet developed throughout the 9-10th century to write Slavic languages. Peter the Great reformed it drastically, and introduced Western European typographic rules in the 18th century. Today it is also used among people who speak non-slavic languages, but live in territories ruled by Russia. For many, it is the symbol of the Soviet Union and Russian Imperialism.
Also in this collection
Cuneiform
Egyptian hieroglyphs
Phoenician
Etruscan
Greek
Latin
Galgolitic
Cyrillic
Runes
Ogham
Syriac
Aramiac
Hebrew
Arabic
Georgian
Mongolian
Indus script
Dhivehi
Javanese
Brahmi
Devanagari
Kawi
Baybayin
Oracle Bone Script
Seal scripts
Chinese
Hangul
Japanese
Yi script
Nüshu
Dongba
Pahawh Hmong
xia xia
Inuktitut syllabary
Cherokee Alphabet
Mik' maq
Quipu
Zapotec
Mayan hieroglyphs
Vai
Ndebele
Bassa Vah
Nsibidi
Tifinagh
Ge’ez script