The Yuan Dynasty didn't have its own characters at first, until Basiba created Basiba characters according to (), all of which were pinyin characters.

The Yuan Dynasty didn't have its own characters at first, until Basiba created Basiba characters based on (Tibetan and Sanskrit), all of which were pinyin characters.

Basiba is a Mongolian character created by Basiba, a "national teacher" during Kublai Khan's reign in the Yuan Dynasty, and is internationally known as "Basiba Mongolian New Word". Basiba (A.D. 1235- 1280) is the fifth generation founder of the Sakya Sect of Tibetan Buddhism (also translated as "Fasiba" and "Paxsaba"), whose real name is. It is said that he could speak Hewajira's dharma practice at the age of three, but the audience lamented that it was rare, so he called it "Bashiba" (meaning "sage" in Tibetan).

At the age of nine, he became famous by telling the sequel "Two Observations" by Khwajira. In the seventh year of Chunyou in the Southern Song Dynasty, he went to Liangzhou (now Wuwei, Gansu) with his uncle Saban Gongga, met Kuo Duan, the grandson of Genghis Khan, the second son of Mongolian Wokuotai Khan, and joined Mongolia from then on.

The "Ba Si Ba Wen" created by Ba Si Ba belongs to Pinyin, with 4 1 letter (based on ancient Tibetan letters). With the demise of the Mongolian Empire, Basiba language was gradually abandoned and became a "language of death", but today we can still see it on various coins of Basiba and other cultural relics of the Yuan Dynasty.

Origin:

Basiba is a phonetic symbol, which sounds meaningless, similar to phonetic symbols. It was used to spell Mongolian, Uygur and Chinese in Yuan Dynasty. The state trains specialized personnel to learn this kind of writing. Its emergence and popularization promoted the civilization process of Mongolian society to a certain extent.