U+1367D "ð“™½" Egyptian Hieroglyph-# Unicode Character
Unicode Version 17.0
U+1367D "ð“™½" Egyptian Hieroglyph-# is a specific glyph from the Egyptian Hieroglyphs block (range 13000–1342F) that represents a sacred or ceremonial symbol, typically used in ancient Egyptian writing and iconography. This particular hieroglyph is cataloged under the category of "other letters" and is part of a large set of over a thousand standardized hieroglyphic signs encoded for digital text representation. It is most commonly associated with religious, funerary, or monumental inscriptions from the time of the pharaohs, though its exact phonetic or ideographic value depends on its context within a word or phrase. As a Unicode character, it allows modern scholars and enthusiasts to accurately preserve and reproduce ancient Egyptian texts in electronic formats without relying on images or specialized fonts.
General Properties
Encodings
| HTML Decimal Encoding |
𓙽 |
| HTML Hex Encoding |
𓙽 |
| UTF-8 Encoding |
0xF0 0x93 0x99 0xBD |
| UTF-16 Encoding |
0xD80D 0xDE7D |
| UTF-32 Encoding |
0x0001367D |
| C/C++/Java Escape |
\ud80d\ude7d |
Unicode Properties
Unikemet Data
| kEH_Cat |
A-28-026 |
| kEH_Core |
C |
| kEH_Desc |
King, seated, both knees up, with covered legs and arms, with a long straight beard, wearing the white crown with uraeus (S1A), holding a club used by washermen for beating laundry (U36) vertically. |
| kEH_Func |
Logogram (majesty) |
| kEH_FVal |
ḥm |
| kEH_UniK |
HJ A043G |
| kEH_JSesh |
A43G |
| kEH_HG |
A43G |
| kEH_IFAO |
43,8 |