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Encyclopedia > Eihwaz

Eihwaz (or Eiwaz, Îgwaz) is the Proto-Germanic word for yew, and the reconstructed name of the rune ᛇ. Its is commonly transliterated as ei or ï. Its phonetic value at the time of the invention of the Futhark (2nd century) was not necessarily a diphtong, but possibly a vowel somewhere between [i] and [e], or [æ].


The rune survives in the Anglo-Saxon Futhorc as ᛇ Eoh "yew".

Eoh byþ utan unsmeþe treow,
heard hrusan fæst, hyrde fyres,
wyrtrumun underwreþyd, wyn on eþle.
The yew is a tree with rough bark,
hard and fast in the earth, supported by its roots,
a guardian of flame and a joy upon an estate.

The associated letter of the Gothic alphabet is 𐌴 e, named aiƕus.


In the Young Futhark, there is the y-rune ᛦ Yr "yew", but neither its shape nor its sound is related to the Eihwaz rune.


The rune is sometimes associated with the World tree Yggdrasil, which, commonly imagined as an ash, may formerly have been a yew.


In modern systems of runic divination, the Eihwaz rune usually symbolizes death (see also Algiz).

Runic alphabet | Rune poems
Elder Fuþark: ᚠ f | ᚢ u | ᚦ þ | ᚨ a | ᚱ r | ᚲ k | ᚷ g | ᚹ w | ᚺ h | ᚾ n | ᛁ i | ᛃ j |ᛇ ï | ᛈ p | ᛉ z | ᛊ s |ᛏ t | ᛒ b | ᛖ e | ᛗ m | ᛚ l | ᛜ ng | ᛞ d | ᛟ o

  Results from FactBites:
 
Rune Eihwaz by Allan Perkins (691 words)
The rune Eihwaz is the thirteenth rune in the Elder Futhark.
Eihwaz, the glyph we're studying in this column, is the 13th of those 24.
Eihwaz is said to be the rune of defense; however, it is also the rune of Yggdrasill or the world tree.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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