Runic inscriptions


A runic inscription is an inscription made in one of the various runic alphabets. They generally contained practical information or memorials instead of magic or mythic stories. The body of runic inscriptions falls into the three categories of Elder Futhark, Anglo-Frisian Futhorc and Younger Futhark.
The total 350 known inscriptions in the Elder Futhark script fall into two main geographical categories, North Germanic and Continental or South Germanic. These inscriptions are on many types of loose objects, but the North Germanic tradition shows a preference for bracteates, while the South Germanic one has a preference for fibulae. The precise figures are debatable because some inscriptions are very short and/or illegible so that it is uncertain whether they qualify as inscriptions at all.
The division into Scandinavian, North Sea, and South Germanic inscriptions makes sense from the 5th century. In the 3rd and 4th centuries, the Elder Futhark script was still in its early phase of development, with inscriptions concentrated in what is now Denmark and Northern Germany.
The tradition of runic literacy continued in Scandinavia into the Viking Age, developing into the Younger Futhark script. Close to 6,000 Younger Futhark inscriptions are known, many of them on runestones.

Statistics

Number of known inscriptions

The following table lists the number of known inscriptions by geographical region:
AreaNumber of runic inscriptions
Sweden3,432
Norway1,552
Denmark844
Scandinavian total5,826
Continental Europe except Scandinavia and Frisia80
Frisia20
The British Isles except Ireland> 200
Greenland> 100
Iceland< 100
Ireland16
Faroes9
Turkey2
Non-Scandinavian total> 500
Total> 6,400

Estimates of total number of inscriptions produced

Elder Futhark inscriptions were rare, with very few active literati, in relation to the total population, at any time, so that knowledge of the runes was probably an actual "secret" throughout the Migration period. Of 366 lances excavated at Illerup, only 2 bore inscriptions. A similar ratio is estimated for Alemannia, with an estimated 170 excavated graves to every inscription found.
Estimates of the total number of inscriptions produced are based on the "minimal runological estimate" of 40,000. The actual number was probably considerably higher, maybe close to 400,000 in total, so that on the order of 0.1% of the corpus has come down to us, and Fischer estimates a population of several hundred active literati throughout the period, with as many as 1,600 during the Alamannic "runic boom" of the 6th century.

Types of inscribed objects

Especially the earliest inscriptions are found on all types of everyday objects. Later, a preference for valuable or prestigious objects seems to develop, inscriptions often indicating ownership.
  • jewelry
  • *bracteates: some 133 Elder Futhark inscriptions, popular during the Scandinavian Germanic Iron Age / Vendel era
  • *fibulae: some 50 Elder Futhark inscriptions, popular in 6th to 7th century Alemannia
  • *brooches: Boarley, Harford brooch, West Heslerton, Wakerley, Dover
  • *belt parts : Vimose buckle, Pforzen buckle, Heilbronn-Böckingen, Szabadbattyan
  • *rings: six known Anglo-Saxon runic rings, a few examples from Alemannia
  • *amber: Weingarten amber-pearl
  • Weapon parts
  • *seaxes: Thames scramasax, Steindorf, Hailfingen
  • *spearheads: Vimose, Kovel, Dahmsdorf-Müncheberg, Wurmlingen
  • *swords and sword-sheaths: Vimose chape, Vimose sheathplate, Thorsberg chape, Schretzheim ring-sword, Ash Gilton gilt silver sword pommel, Chessel Down II silver plate, Sæbø sword
  • coins: Skanomody solidus, Harlingen solidus, Schweindorf solidus, Folkestone tremissis, Midlum sceat, Kent II coins, Kent III, IV silver sceattas, Suffolk gold shillings, Upper Thames Valley gold coins
  • boxes or containers: Franks Casket, Schretzheim capsule, Gammertingen case, Ferwerd combcase, Kantens combcase
  • runestones: from about AD 400, very popular for Viking Age Younger Futhark inscriptions
  • bone: Caistor-by-Norwich astragalus, Rasquert swordhandle, Hantum whalebone plate, Bernsterburen whalebone staff, Hamwick horse knucklebone, Wijnaldum A antler piece
  • pieces of wood: Vimose woodplane, Neudingen/Baar, Arum sword, Westeremden yew-stick
  • cremation urns: Loveden Hill, Spong Hill
  • the Kleines Schulerloch inscription is a singular example of an inscription on a cave wall
  • spindle whorls

    Early period (2nd to 4th centuries)

The earliest period of Elder Futhark predates the division in regional script variants, and linguistically essentially still reflect the Common Germanic stage. Their distribution is mostly limited to southern Scandinavia, northern Germany and Frisia, with stray finds associated with the Goths from Romania and Ukraine.
Linguistically, the 3rd and 4th centuries correspond to the formation of Proto-Norse, just predating the separation of West Germanic into Anglo-Frisian, Low German and High German.
About 260 items in Elder Futhark, and close to 6,000 items in Younger Futhark.
The highest concentration of Elder Futhark inscriptions is in Denmark.
An important Proto-Norse inscription was on one of the Golden Horns of Gallehus. A total of 133 known inscriptions on bracteates. There are several legible and partly interpretable inscription that date from the 1st half of the 5th century such as a Silver neck ring found near Aalen with "noru" inscribed in runic alphabets on its inner edge. others discoveries were unearthed around Germany, Denmark, Norway, Hungary, Belgium, England and Bosnia.
The oldest known runestones date to the early 5th century, although the Hole Runestone, discovered during excavations from 2021–2023, is dated even earlier.
The longest known inscription in the Elder Futhark, and one of the youngest, consists of some 200 characters and is found on the early 8th-century Eggjum stone, and may even contain a stanza of Old Norse poetry.
The transition to Younger Futhark begins from the 6th century, with transitional examples like the Björketorp or Stentoften stones. In the early 9th century, both the older and the younger futhark were known and used, which is shown on the Rök runestone. By the 10th century, only Younger Futhark remained in use. Greenlandic Norse developed several distinct forms, in particular a version of reið with two parallel sloping branches that is found in 14 Greenlandic inscriptions.

Anglo-Frisian

Some 110 items spanning the 5th to 11th centuries.
The 5th-century Undley bracteate is considered the earliest known Anglo-Frisian inscription.
The 8th-century Franks Casket, preserved during the Middle Ages in Brioude, central France, exhibits the longest coherent inscriptions in Anglo-Saxon runes by far, including five alliterating long-lines, qualifying as the oldest preserved Anglo-Saxon poetry.
While the Nordic bracteates are jewelry imitating Roman gold coins, there were a number of actual coins in Anglo-Saxon England inscribed with runes, notably the coins from Kent, inscribed with pada, æpa and epa.
There are a number of Christian inscriptions from the time of Christianization.
St. Cuthbert's coffin, dated to 698, even has a runic monogram of Christ, and the Whitby II bone comb has a pious plea for God's help, deus meus, god aluwaldo, helpæ Cy... "my God, almighty God, help Cy…". The Ruthwell Cross inscription could also be mentioned, but its authenticity is dubious; it might have been added only in the 10th century.
Unlike the situation on the continent, the tradition of runic writing does not disappear in England after Christianization but continues for a full three centuries, disappearing after the Norman conquest. A type of object unique to Christianized Anglo-Saxon England are the six known Anglo-Saxon runic rings of the 9th to 10th centuries.

Continental

Apart from the earliest inscriptions found on the continent along the North Sea coast, continental inscriptions can be divided in those of the "Alemannic runic province" , with a few dozen examples dating to the 6th and 7th centuries, and those associated with the Goths, loosely scattered along the Oder to south-eastern Poland, as far as the Carpathian Mountains, dating to the 4th and 5th centuries.
The cessation of both the Gothic and Alemannic runic tradition coincides with the Christianization of the respective peoples.
Lüthi identifies a total of about 81 continental inscriptions found south of the "North Germanic Koine". Most of these originate in southern Germany, with a single one found south of the Rhine, and a handful from Eastern Europe.
A silver-plated copper disk, originally part of a sword-belt, found at Liebenau, Lower Saxony with an early 5th-century runic inscription is classed as the earliest South Germanic inscription known by the RGA ; the location of Liebenau is close to the boundary of the North Sea and South Germanic zones.

Gothic

Out of about a dozen candidate inscriptions, only three are widely accepted to be of Gothic origin: the gold ring of Pietroassa, bearing a votive inscription, part of a larger treasure found in the Romanian Carpathians, and two spearheads inscribed with what is probably the weapon's name, one found in the Ukrainian Carpathians, and the other in eastern Germany, near the Oder.
The inscription on the spearhead of Kovel, found in Ukraine is a special case. Its date is very early and it shows a mixture of runic and Latin letters, reading
or , and may thus reflect a stage of development before the runes became fixed as a separate script in its own right.