
|
|
|
| Name | Snoldelev Stone |
|---|---|
| Rundata ID | DR 248 |
| Country | Denmark |
| Region | Ramsø |
| City/Village | Currently Copenhagen, originally Snoldelev |
| Produced | Viking Age |
| Runemaster | unknown |
| Text - Native | |
| Gunwalds sten, sonaR Roalds, þulaR a Salhøgum. | |
| Text - English | |
| Gunnvaldr's stone, Hróaldr's son, reciter of Salhaugar | |
| Other resources | |
| Runestones - Runic alphabet - Runology - Runestone styles v
|
|
The 9th century runestone at Snoldelev, Ramsø, Denmark, is decorated with a design of three drinking horns interlocking as incomplete Borromean rings (similar to the Diane de Poitiers three crescents emblem), and a swastika. The triple horn motif has been compared to a triskelion, or to the valknut symbol. The runestone is housed at the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The runestone shows an early version of the Younger Futhark. Like the late Elder Futhark Björketorp Runestone, it uses an a-rune
which has the same form as the h-rune has in the long-branch version of the younger futhark. This a-rune is transliterated with capital A below. The Snoldelev runestone also retains the elder futhark haglaz rune (
) for the h-phoneme and this is represented by capital H in the transliteration below.
Contents |
The inscription reads:
This represents the Old Norse:
In English translation by the Rundata project:
ÞulR signifies some office or rank, perhaps a priest or a skald, compare Old Norse þula "litany". The translation offered by the Rundata project suggests reciter. According to Peterson, Salhaugar refers to modern Salløv in the vicinity of the stone.
The triple horn motif on the stone was adopted by the Asatru Folk Assembly as its official logo in October 2006.
|
Detail of swastika found on the stone. |
Detail of the interlaced horns. |
Snoldelev interlaced horns design (Illustration). |
Why are we here?
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
This page is cache of Wikipedia. History