clovenhooves The Personal Is Political General News World's oldest runestone may have been signed by a woman, researchers say (NBC News)

News World's oldest runestone may have been signed by a woman, researchers say (NBC News)

News World's oldest runestone may have been signed by a woman, researchers say (NBC News)

 
komorebi
“I am not free while any woman is unfree, even when her shackles are very different from my own.” – Audre Lorde
328
Feb 26 2025, 2:31 PM
#1
NBC News, Feb 24, 2025.

Quote:A woman may have signed her name on the world's oldest dated runestone, researchers in Norway have found, as they piece together the 2,000-year-old puzzle.

The inscription begins with the word “I” in runic script, followed by the name of the writer and a verb that indicates writing, before ending with the word “rune,” researchers wrote earlier this month in the journal Antiquity after studying a fragment of the stone found at a grave site in Hole, a small municipality in southern Norway to the east of the capital, Oslo.

Quote:Due to the damage and the weathering of the stone, she added that determining the exact text, including the name of the inscriber, is a “bit tricky,” but what especially caught the attention of the researchers is a feature in the name that indicates it ended with a “-u.”

In ancient runic script, she said that would indicate a possible woman’s name which, if confirmed, “would be the earliest known record of a female rune-inscriber.”
komorebi
“I am not free while any woman is unfree, even when her shackles are very different from my own.” – Audre Lorde
Feb 26 2025, 2:31 PM #1

NBC News, Feb 24, 2025.

Quote:A woman may have signed her name on the world's oldest dated runestone, researchers in Norway have found, as they piece together the 2,000-year-old puzzle.

The inscription begins with the word “I” in runic script, followed by the name of the writer and a verb that indicates writing, before ending with the word “rune,” researchers wrote earlier this month in the journal Antiquity after studying a fragment of the stone found at a grave site in Hole, a small municipality in southern Norway to the east of the capital, Oslo.

Quote:Due to the damage and the weathering of the stone, she added that determining the exact text, including the name of the inscriber, is a “bit tricky,” but what especially caught the attention of the researchers is a feature in the name that indicates it ended with a “-u.”

In ancient runic script, she said that would indicate a possible woman’s name which, if confirmed, “would be the earliest known record of a female rune-inscriber.”

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