ttf-babelstone-latin contains the following fonts BabelStone Roman: It is a Unicode serif font covering the Latin script. It was designed primarily for use in phonetic transcription of Tangut, but may be useful for other purposes. he current version of the font supports Unicode 15.0 and covers all 1,481 Latin script characters defined in Unicode 15.0. BabelStone Englisc: It is a font for Old English in the general style of the Anglo-Saxon font cut for Franciscus Junius (1591–1677) in about 1655, and used in various editions of Anglo-Saxon texts published in Oxford during the 17th and 18th centuries, for example the Anglo-Saxon Heptateuch compiled by Edward Thwaites, and published in 1698. The font uses the same letterforms as the Junius font, but not necessarily exactly same glyph forms. Some characters are double-mapped, both to their proper Unicode code point and to the semantically-corresponding character (e.g. 'wynn' maps to 'wynn' and 'w'; and 'and' maps to 'tyronian et' and 'ampersand'). NB: This font is only available in regular style, and there are no bold or italic versions. BabelStone Goblin fonts: BabelStone Goblin and BabelStone Goblin Vertical are two versions of a font based on North Polar Bear's Goblin alphabet in J. R. R. Tolkien's Father Christmas Letters (1976). BabelStone Goblin is designed for horizontal layout, whereas BabelStone Goblin Vertical is designed for vertical layout. Note that the glyphs of the vertical font will be rotated counterclockwise with respect to normal reading orientation when used in horizontal contexts BabelStone Centaurian: BabelStone Centaurian is a font based on the Centaurian alphabet used in the first UK edition of Artemis Fowl : The Arctic Incident by Eoin Colfer (it has been replaced by the ubiquitous Gnommish script in the American and recent UK editions). The Centaurian alphabet is cypher of the English alphabet, but with the twist that the space character is a non-blank glyph and the character corresponding to the letter T is a blank space. BabelStone Pigpen fonts: BabelStone Pigpen is an extended version of one of the most common pigpen ciphers, with glyphs for all characters in the Basic Latin block. BabelStone Club Penguin is an extended version of the pigpen cipher used on Club Penguin, with glyphs for all characters in the Basic Latin block. BabelStone Leeson is the pigpen cipher used on the tombstone of James Leeson (died 1794) in the graveyard of Trinity Church on Broadway in New York. This cipher represents the 24-letter alphabet of the 18th century, so that I/J and U/V are not distinguished. There are three spare berths in the third pigpen, which I have assigned to ampersand, question mark and exclamation mark.