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runes
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
runes ancient characters used in Teutonic, Anglo-Saxon, and Scandinavian inscriptions . They were probably first used by the East Goths (c.300), who are thought to have derived them from Helleno-Italic writing. The runes were adapted to carving on wood and stone; they consisted of perpendicular, oblique, and a few curved lines. The first six runic signs were for f, u, th, o ( a ) , r, c ( k ), hence the name Futhorc for the runic alphabets. There were two alphabets, one of 16 signs and the other of 24 (the same 16 with 8 additional signs). They were used extensively throughout N Europe, Iceland, England, Ireland, and Scotland until the establishment of Christianity. From then on the use of runes was reviled as a pagan practice. In Scandinavia their use persisted even after the Middle Ages; there they were used for manuscripts as well as inscriptions. The word rune is derived from an early Anglo-Saxon word meaning secret or mystery.
Bibliography: See A. F. Brodeur, The Riddle of the Runes (1932, repr. 1973); R. I. Page, An Introduction to English Runes (1973).
Author not available, RUNES.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Medium Aevum; 3/22/1993; Poppe, Erich; 672 words
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The third grammatical treatise and Ole Worm's Literatura Runica.
Scandinavian Studies; 12/22/2004; Wills, Tarrin; 7965 words
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'Runes' marks return to form
Albuquerque Journal; 10/10/2004; Review by J.I. Gallegos; 348 words
; REVIEWS "The Runes of the Earth" by Stephen R. Donaldson Putnam, $26.95, 560 pp. The wait is over. After 20 years, Albuquerque author Stephen R. Donaldson has returned home to his acclaimed series The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. "The Runes of the Earth, Book One of The Last Chronicles of Thomas
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Runes and their secrets; studies in runology.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reference & Research Book News; 8/1/2007; 121 words
; ... Brandbjerg Hojskole in Denmark. Two of them are in German. No doubt some wag submitted a paper written in runes, but it was not selected for publication. No index is provided. Distributed in the US by ISBS. ([c]20072005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR)
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THE RUNES OF THE EARTH: THE LAST CHRONICLES OF THOMAS COVENANT by Stephen Donaldson
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ASK THE GLOBE
The Boston Globe; 2/26/1990; 97 words
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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Kensington Rune Stone
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
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rune
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
... similar mark of mysterious or magic significance. ∎ ( runes ) small stones, pieces of bone, etc., bearing such marks, and used as divinatory symbols: the casting of the runes. ∎ a spell or incantation. ∎ a section ...
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runes
World Encyclopedia
runes Angular characters or letters of an alphabet formerly used by Germanic peoples in early medieval times. Also called futhark after ...
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RUNE
Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
... in Scandinavia, Iceland, and Britain, to write GERMANIC LANGUAGES . Runes, long regarded as magical, have been used on monuments, in charms, in fortunetelling ( casting the runes ), and as decorative motifs. Each has a mnemonic name beginning with ...
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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
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