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The designs of the Junicode roman characters are based on a 17th-century typeface design used at the [[Oxford University Press]], also known as Clarendon Press. Peter Baker based the Junicode roman design on those used in [[George Hickes (divine)|George Hickes]]' ''Linguarum Vett. Septentrionalium Thesaurus'' (1703–1705), naming the typeface Junicode ("Junius Unicode") after [[Franciscus Junius (the younger)|Franciscus Junius]], who had commissioned the original typeface used for the Anglo-Saxon texts in that volume, "Pica Saxon".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oenewsletter.org/OEN/archive/OEN40_1.pdf|author=Peter S. Baker|year=2006|title=Typing in Old English since 1967: A Brief History|work=''[[Old English Newsletter]]'' Online|at=Volume 40.1|accessdate=2015-07-14}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://junicode.sourceforge.net/design.html|title=Design and History of Junicode (@ Junicode's SourceForge page)|accessdate=2015-07-14}}</ref> The designs represent an intermediate stage between earlier 16th century typefaces (such as [[Garamond]]) and later 18th century typefaces (such as [[Caslon]]). The Junicode roman character design shares a number of features with these earlier and later typefaces.
Junicode has an individual [[Greek alphabet|Greek]] typeface, Foulis Greek. The design is a traditional revival as well. It is based on the Greek Double Pica cut by Alexander Wilson (c.
==Origins and uses==
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