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Encyclopedia > Rune stones
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A rune stone

Rune stones are somewhat flat standing stones with runic stone carvings from the Iron Age (Viking Age) and early middle ages found in most parts of Scandinavia. Gotland, the largest island in the Baltic, still contains many rune stones. The inscriptions are made in different dialectal variants of the Old Norse language.


The majority of these stones date after the introduction of Christianity; they often include the Christian cross and use the younger futhark. But older stones are pagan Norse and use the older futhark. Their inscriptions are the oldest written source texts created in the Nordic countries and some give a few clues about mythology and the society in Scandinavia at this time. Numbers are written out in text, i.e. "123" is "onehundredtwentythree", since the Indo-Arabic numerals were not yet employed. Years are counted through father generations, or the number of elapsed winters.


Most stones are put up as memorials for a dead person: in many cases death caused by sudden and unexpected events. These typically have an inscription of the type: "X had this stone carved for Y, a great man, God help his soul. Z carved it". Other stones are put up as landmarks. Several stones have obviously been erected by women.

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The largest of the image stones from the parish of Ardre, Gotland, ca 750 AD

Several inscriptions include works of art, for example, the runes may be inscribed inside a serpent-like creature, and some stones ("image stones") found on Gotland contain artistic imagery without any runes.


When the stones were carved, the runic letters were also painted with some color, mostly red (based on archaeological analysis), so they would be easily visible. Newly discovered stones often lack this color because of erosion, but caretakers nowadays make sure they are repainted and readable.


Famous rune stones and image stones from Gotland

  • The Eggjum stone
  • The Ramsund carving
  • The Rök Stone
  • The Ardre image stones
  • The Austers Hangvar Stone
  • The Halla Bora stone
  • The Husaby Stone
  • The Hogrän Stone
  • The Klinte Stone
  • The Kylver Stone
  • The Martebo Stones
  • The Pilgards Rune Stone, Boge
  • The Sanda Stones
  • The Sjonhem Stone
  • The Stenkjyrka Stone, Lillebjärs
  • The Stora Hammars Stone and the Tägarda Rune Stone, Lärbro parish
  • The Timans Rune Stone
  • The Tängvida Stone

Compare Megalithic Standing stones, Gaelic High crosses.


The highly controversial Kensington runestone is located at Kensington, Minnesota.


See also

A common problem when researching things Norse is that the spelling of names varies much depending on one's country of origin. In the articles presented here, several common forms of the names will be presented. For more information see:

External links

  • Photos of rune stones and image stones from Gotland (http://home.no.net/ahruner/gotland.htm)


Norse mythology
The Nine Worlds of Norse Mythology
People, places and things: Deities | Giants | Dwarves | Valkyries
Orthography | Numbers | Runes | Kenning
Elder Edda | Younger Edda | Skald | Sagas | Later influence

  Results from FactBites:
 
North American Rune Stones (2096 words)
The runes showed very plainly because the bottom of the grooves were in a lighter colored layer of the stone, while the surface was dark.
The Poteau runes read "G L O I A L L W (ALU)." He says that he found that "Gloi," is a nickname for "Glome," thus the two stones are related to the same man. The word "ALU" is a magical formula.
The language used on the rune stone is the same as the vernacular on historical legal documents written between 1355 and 1375.
Kensington Rune Stone Collection (828 words)
The Kensington Rune Stone was discovered three miles northeast of Kensington, Douglas County, Minnesota in the fall of 1898.
"The Myth of the Kensington Rune Stone: The Norse Discovery of Minnesota 1362." The New England Quarterly 7 (December, 1934), 613-645.
“The Kensington Rune Stone.” Minnesota Archaeologist 27 (1965), 97-115.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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