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Runes
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- Runes Through Time
- The Vikings are often portrayed as
illiterate, uncultured barbarians who evinced more
interest in plunder than in poetry. In fact, the
Vikings left behind a great number of documents in
stone, wood and metal, all written in the enigmatic
symbols known as runes. They relied on these symbols
not only for writing but also to tell fortunes, cast
spells, and provide protection.
- Early Germanic tribes of northern
Europe were first to develop runes, but the
Scandinavians soon adopted the symbols for their own
use. When the seafaring Vikings traveled to faraway
lands, they brought their system of writing with them,
leaving runic inscriptions in places as distant as
Greenland. Wherever they went, Vikings turned to runes
to express both the poetic ("Listen,
ring-bearers, while I speak/Of the glories in war of
Harald, most wealthy") and the prosaic
("Rannvieg owns this box"), inscribing them
on everything from great stone monuments to common
household items.
- Learn your F-U-TH's
- The runic alphabet, or Futhark, gets
its name from its first six sounds (f, u, th, a, r,
k), much like the word 'alphabet' derives from the
first two letters of the Greek alphabet, alpha and
beta. Each rune not only represents a phonetic sound
but also has its own distinct meaning often connected
with Norse mythology (see clickable alphabet at left).
Scholars believe that early peoples used the runes
originally as a means of communication and only later
for magical purposes.
- Historians disagree on when runes
first came into use. Since the first objects inscribed
with runes date to the second and third centuries
A.D., some surmise that the runic alphabet arose
during the first century A.D. Scholars concur that
runes grew out of an earlier alphabet, but which one
is unclear. A likely candidate is the Etruscan
alphabet. Many argue that the geographic proximity of
the Etruscans, who lived in northern Italy, to the
Germanic tribes of northern Europe makes it likely
that these two groups had some form of cultural
exchange. Also, similarities exist in some letterforms
of the Etruscan and runic alphabets. Another
possibility for a source alphabet is Latin. Those who
subscribe to this theory believe that the numerous
commercial contacts between the Germanic tribes and
the Roman Empire during the first century A.D. exposed
the former to the Latin alphabet. The Northerners may
have simply borrowed the Roman letters and adapted
them to their needs.
- The Scandinavians had their own
explanation for the appearance of the runes. According
to legend, Odin, chief of the Norse gods, speared
himself to a tree in a self-sacrificial attempt to
receive occult knowledge. As he hung suspended for
nine windy nights, he learned the mysteries of the
runes, which he then passed on to his people. Since
Nordic peoples believed the runic script to be a gift
from Odin, they treated it with great reverence.
Belief in the divine origin of the runes also
contributed to the idea that runes possessed magical
powers.
- Meet the Rune Master
- Those who used them for magic took
the supernatural powers of the runes seriously. As one
Viking poet put it, "Let no man carve runes to
cast a spell, save first he learns to read them
well." While many in the upper classes could read
and write runes, the Vikings called in a specialist
when dealing with the talismanic properties of their
alphabet. These experts, called Rune Masters, were
specially trained to bring runes into play for
divination and sorcery.
- Judging from the many poems and
legends chronicling their feats, the Rune Masters held
positions of great importance in the Viking world. In
one tale, a woman becomes deathly ill due to the
bungling of an amateur Rune Master. The sorcerer
carves a runic formula onto a whalebone, which the
woman then hangs over her bed. The inscription is
meant to protect her, but because it bears the wrong
runes, it makes her sick. Another Rune Master corrects
the runes, and the woman immediately recovers. In
another story, a Rune Master inscribes protective
runic symbols on his drinking horn. When a rival
attempts to poison his drink, the drinking horn breaks
in two. Thanks to his knowledge of the runes, the Rune
Master saves his own life.
- Rune Masters were also skilled in the
art of rune casting, a method of divination. In one
common rune-casting technique, the diviner carved
runes on pieces of bark, then flung the pieces on the
ground, picked three at random, and used the symbols
inscribed on them to answer his client's question.
Alternatively, the Rune Master painted runes on flat
pebbles. He then placed the pebbles in a leather bag,
shook the bag, and cast the pebbles onto the ground.
Runes that landed face up served for the divination.
- Viking warriors harnessed the arcane
powers of the runes even in war. Runic inscriptions on
swords entreated the gods either to protect the
sword's owner or bring pain and misery to his enemy.
The berserkers, whose reckless behavior on the
battlefield gave rise to the word 'beserk,' may owe
their reputation in part to the runes. These warriors
customarily carved the runic symbol for Tyr, the god
of war, onto their shields. They would then charge
fearlessly into battle, in the belief that nothing
could overcome the power of the runes.
- Raise a runestone
- The magical met the mundane in the
runestones -- large, freestanding rocks or boulders
inscribed with runes. Runestones that served as
memorials to the dead often bore thaumaturgical
formulas meant to ease the dead person's passage into
the next world. But these monuments had a pragmatic
purpose as well: documenting how much land the
deceased had owned and listing relatives who would
likely inherit that person's estate. One such
dual-purpose runestone was put up by "Kaufi and
Autir, they erected this stone in memory of Tumi,
their brother who owned Gusnava [a Swedish
village]." Kaufi and Autir erected their
runestone both to honor their brother and to make
perfectly clear who owned Gusnava after his death.
- Although most runestones honor men,
some commemorated Viking women. One runestone found in
Norway honors "Gunnvor, Thryrik's daughter, [who]
built a bridge in memory of her daughter Astrid. She
was the handiest girl in Hadeland." Some
runestones also celebrated the achievements of the
living. In one example, Jarlabanki, builder of the
famous Jarlabanki causeway in 11th-century Sweden,
erected a group of runestones to aggrandize himself
for his contributions to the community.
- Even with the advent of Christianity
in the north, runes continued to appear on coffins,
gravestones, and monuments, often side-by-side with
more traditional Christian symbols. Like many of their
contemporaries, the Norsemen Sven and Thorgot, who
raised a runestone "in memory of Manni and Sveni;
may God help their souls," had no problem using
pagan symbols to replace the usual "may Thor
hallow these Runes" with an appeal to the
Christian God. The Norsemen continued the practice of
mixing runes with Christian symbols until the 17th
century, when the medieval church banned runes in an
attempt to drive out all vestiges of superstition,
paganism, and magic. Runes fell out of widespread use
but did not disappear altogether, and in recent times
the Vikings' enigmatic alphabet has had a resurgence
at the hands of everyone from Nazis to New Agers.
Nicole Sanderson is NOVA Online's intern.
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