What is Emancholl?
Emancholl (pronounced approximately as its Latin equivalent, AE/X) is one of the letters of the ancient Ogham alphabet, the edge-carved writing system used in early medieval Ireland and Britain. It belongs to the Forfeda — one of five groupings that make up the full 25-letter Ogham script.
In the traditional Celtic tree calendar associated with Ogham, Emancholl is linked to the Twin of Hazel. Each Ogham letter carries not just a phonetic value but a natural symbol — a feature that makes Ogham unique among ancient European writing systems.
How to Write Emancholl
In the Forfeda, strokes are formed with more complex strokes crossing or angling across the stem — these are extended characters for sounds not in early Old Irish.
Ogham is traditionally written bottom-to-top along the edge of a standing stone. In modern horizontal use — as seen in tattoos, jewellery, and digital text — the script reads left-to-right.
The Unicode Character
Emancholl is encoded in Unicode as part of the Ogham block (U+1680–U+169F). The character for Emancholl is:
Latin equivalent: AE/X
Aicme: Forfeda
Tree: Twin of Hazel
Names Containing This Sound
Here are some names that use the AE/X sound — you can see Emancholl in the transliteration:
Try It in the Translator
Type any name or word into our free Ogham translator to see Emancholl and the other letters in action.