Backyard settings
Devi
Space Age and Ice Age proto-writing
Chen Hongshou 'The Four Joys of Nan Shengu-lu (164…
Dodge
E pur si muove
Little Graffiti
Blue Bench
Trees
A man....
Farmer's Wife
Paw
Bench Pedestal
Black Bear Diner's bench
Summer / Vaishaka
Yellow Jamha Juice
Forebears by John Needham
No more Chocolate .....
Reading the Runes
To My Valentine
Road
Musician
Bucchro Jug
Roku
Lunch ~ Safe secluded place.... COVID season
Music
Autumn - break of the day
The Earliest 'Alphabetic' Inscriptions
"Nothingness"
Gladiolus / Sword Lilies
The priest-king of the Indus civilization
The Beach
Tomato Blossom
Masked Marlin(?)
Hanging Bridge
:o((
After shopping....
See also...
Keywords
Runes


Runes (Proto-Germanic *rūnō 'rune'; *rūna-stabaz 'runic letter') are the letters in a set of related alphabets known as runic alphabets, which were used to write various Germanic languages before the adoption of the Latin alphabet and for specialised purposes thereafter.
Erhard Bernstein, J.Garcia have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
The runic alphabet has 24 letters, arranged in a peculiar order known as the ‘futhark’ after its first six letters. Here it is written from left to right, but it could be written from right to left equally well in early times, or seven boustrophedon. And individual letters could also be reversed on occasions, apparently with whim, and might even be inverted. There are no distinction capital and lower-case letters. - page 179
There was a range of runic scripts, reflecting the range of languages involved. The total number of known runic inscriptions is probably in the region of 5000, almost all of which are located in Nordic countries. The great majority are in Sweden, where discoveries of rune stones are still frequently made. Norway has over 1000 inscriptions, and Denmark some 700; Iceland has about 60, and from comparatively late times, and there are also runic texts from Greenland, and the Faroes. Some of those in Britain, found in the Isle of man and in the Orkneys, Shetlands, Ireland and Western Isles, are the work of travelling Norsemen; Anglo-Saxon England has, in addition to several issues of coins with runic legends, some 70 inscribed objects; Germany about 60; elsewhere in Europe there is a scattering of runes.
The runic alphabets has 24 letters, arranged in a peculiar order known as the “futhark” aftr its first six letters. Here it is written from left to right but it could be written from right to left equally well in early times, or even boustrophedon. An individual letter could also be reversed on occasions, apparently at whim, and might even be invented. There was no distinction between capital and lower-case letters ~ Page 177 / 178
The runic alphabet has 24 letters, arranged in a peculiar order known as the ‘futhark’ after its first six letters. Here it is written from left to right, but it could be written from right to left equally well in early times, or seven boustrophedon. And individual letters could also be reversed on occasions, apparently with whim, and might even be inverted. There are no distinction capital and lower-case letters. - page 179
Sign-in to write a comment.