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Chargement... Runic Inscriptions: In Great Britain (Wooden Books Gift Book)par Paul Johnson
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)427.00901Language English Historical and geographic variations, modern nongeographic variations of English Period divisionsClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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The book first introduced therunic alphabet (Futhorc) in the several incarnations found in Great Britain and the isles: Garmanic, Anglo-Saxon, Danish, Manx-Jeran, and Orkney, with the letter shapes and values. I'd not realized that there were separate Manx-Jeran or Orkney variations. Cool. When the text discussed the Anglo-Saxon Runic Poem, the illustration was of the originally published text, in Anglo-Saxon. The text that follows that translates each verse. Then it touches on the literal meanings of some letters, with a summary table for all the Anglo-Saxon runes.
The central portion of the book gives an overview of 18 individual artifacts with runic inscriptions. The text notes where each was found, where the artifact is now (usually a museum), and what the inscription says, when it can be translated. There is even a bit of history or something else interesting about each artifact. This is where I found out about another way of writing runes - twig runes that rely on the writer (and reader) knowing the futhorc in order, grouped in aettir (sets of 8 letters).
The last few pages cover some of the more esoteric rune-lore based on nine lines, or twigs, as the model for writing the whole alphabet.
This book was a gift from a friend recently returned from visiting some of the places these artifacts were found or displayed. The book was likely intended for the tourists. It is a tiny volume, but mighty, shedding new light on an old alphabet. ( )