Unicode Fonts

I have made one CSS style sheet for all of my pages where I specify a series of Unicode fonts (see lower down on this page). You'll need one of them. If you have several of that list installed, your browser will use the first one it finds. If you don't like that particular one, just remove it, and install one you like better.
Or instruct you browser to "ignore font styles specified on the web", under: Tools-Internet Options-General-Accessibility. You must then also specify which Unicode font you want to see: Tools-Internet Options-General-Fonts)

Why have I done that, instead of letting you use your default font automatically, without going through the "Accessibility" option?
Because of IE. While Netscape, Mozilla, Firefox, Opera have no trouble displaying a Unicode page properly, IE seems not to know what to do with diacritics. Unless it is told what font to use! So that's what I have done, told it, in the following order:

 Arial Unicode Ms, Palatino Linotype, Gentium, Lucida Grande, Titus Cyberkit Basic, Alkaios, Cardo, Vusillus Old Face, Tahoma  

I have put Tahoma last because the Tahoma font supplied with Windows versions prior to XP Service Pack 1 is not a Unicode font. But your browser wouldn't know that and would therefore use it, with disastrous effects: no diacritics but little blank boxes.


Here's a list of sites you can download the various fonts from:

Arial Unicode MS, supplied with Microsoft Office 2000

Palatino Linotype (supplied with Windows XP):

Gentium (Windows, Mac and Linux)
Gentium download site

Titus Cyberkit Font (both Windows and Mac)
http://titus.fkidg1.uni-frankfurt.de/unicode/tituut.asp

Lucida Grande comes with Mac OS X

Alkaios download (Mac and Windows):
http://www.lucius-hartmann.ch/diverse/greekfonts/#unicode

Cardo (Mac OS X and Windows)
http://scholarsfonts.net/cardofnt.html

Vusillus Old Face (Mac and Windows):
http://www.users.dircon.co.uk/~hancock/vudown.htm

Tahoma (Unicode) comes bundled with Windows XP SP1