Although it is an early Fraktur pattern, it is easy to see the particular distinctions with the Schwabacher style (appearance at 1538 Schwabacher), like in the little d, o or y. and the capitals (take a look at the H, K, T.).
Frequently, Schwabacher and Fraktur were utilized together in the same book: Fraktur style for the main and Schwabacher for marginalia and comments.
This typeface consists of standard ligatures and German historic ligatures (German double s, long s, ts ...) and diacritics (unique ummlaut 'e superscript' and '∞' instead of dieresis with letters a, o and u,) naturally, we have actually added various letters doing not have in the initial to permit a modern use of the font.
Font Family: 1534 Fraktur Normal
Tags: 1500's, 1600's, 1700's, antiqued, blackletters, certificate, decorative, distressed, formal, german, headline