Brahmi script -
Brahmi is the mother of most of India's scripts and it has been used in the writings of Emperor Ashoka.
From the 5th century BC until 350 BC, its only form is found, but later it has two divisions - the northern section and southern section
In the northern section of the Brahmi script, Gupta script, crooked script, Sharda and Devanagari script have been kept.
Southern section includes Telugu, Kannada, Tamil Kalinga, Text, Middle Desi and Western script.
The Brahmi script was written from left to right.
Kharoshthi script -
This script, which was prevalent in northwestern India, was written from right to left.
It is considered to be developed from the foreign origin script ie Aramaic and Syrian script.
There was no shortage of vowels in this script with a total of 37 letters, even the quantities and the combined letters are not even available.
Shastra Ashram's Shahbag Garhi and Mana Sahera Paksh-based records provide testimony of the scriptures.
James Princes was the founder of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. For the first time in the modern era, Brahmi and Karasarthri scripts are known for reading.