![tibetan and bengali alphabet tibetan and bengali alphabet](https://salrc.uchicago.edu/resources/fonts/available/sindhi/img/mblateefiset.gif)
It was later standardised into the modern Bengali script by Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar under the reign of the East India Company. It later continued to be specifically used in the Bengal region.
![tibetan and bengali alphabet tibetan and bengali alphabet](https://cdn.imgbin.com/14/24/10/imgbin-computer-keyboard-standard-tibetan-tibetan-alphabet-bengali-german-keyboard-layout-pCSEtXDQgRzw7mWiYKfjX3R5J.jpg)
The Bengali script was originally not associated with any particular language but was often used in the eastern regions of the Middle kingdoms of India and then in the Pala Empire. It also uses the Assamese script character sounding wô, represented as ৱ. The version of the script used for Manipuri is also a different variation it uses the rô, represented as র in Bengali script without the different representation as in Assamese script.
![tibetan and bengali alphabet tibetan and bengali alphabet](https://thumbs.dreamstime.com/b/bengali-alphabet-pattern-background-image-created-characters-writing-system-198400467.jpg)
When one is referring to the set of Latin letters used for a particular language, it’s ok to refer to that set as the “ alphabet”. But some use a slightly different number of letters. Obviously, many European languages use the same Latin script. I originally titled the chart “Evolution of the English alphabet” and many people commented that there is no such thing as an English alphabet and that the chart should be titled “Evolution of the Latin alphabet”.
![tibetan and bengali alphabet tibetan and bengali alphabet](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Cer8EB2WEAADP9c.jpg)
Baker explains that while the chart arranges the letters according to the English alphabet, the letters are not originally English. The chart shows how modern English language evolved from the ancient Proto-Sinaitic script of biblical times to the Phoenician alphabet to the Archaic Greek alphabet to Archaic Latin to Roman script and the modern Roman form we know and use now. Matt Baker of Useful Charts has designed a wonderful high resolution wall chart ( larger) that explains the how each letter of the alphabet developed over various periods within thousands of years.