- the land
south of the Gulf of
Finland was
called Eistland and the
people eistr. The Wanradt–Koell Catechism, the
first known book in Estonian, was printed...
-
runestone was
raised by some brothers,
three of whom were
named Guðsteinn,
Eistr, and Áki, in
memory of
their father Freygeirr.
According to
scholar Omeljan...
- {bro[ður sinn].} Ingi-... and Jógerðr, they had this
stone raised in
memory of
Eistr,
their son;
Ernfastr and his
brothers raised in
memory of
their brother...
-
mentioning a
Freygeirr was
raised by his sons: U 1158: Guðsteinn(?) and
Eistr and ... and Áki had the
stone raised in
memory of Freygeirr,
their father...
- sons, one of
which was
named Holmgeirr, as a
memorial for
their father Eistr.
hulmkair Holmgæiʀʀ ' ... ... ...itu [l]etu h--ua h[agg]va a[t] at ' ...
-
several brothers and
possibly daughters as a
memorial to
their father named Eistr. In
carving the text, Öpir left off the
final "ʀ" in runaʀ, or "runes,"...