-
article contains runic characters.
Without proper rendering support, you may see
question marks, boxes, or
other symbols instead of
runes.
Runes are the letters...
- SS
runes (German: SS-Runen) is a
generic name
given to a
collection of pseudo-
runes used by the
Schutzstaffel (SS), from the 1920s to 1945, for **** occultism-purposes;...
- long-branch
runes are the
following rune signs: In the short-twig
runes (or Rök
runes), nine
runes appear as
simplified variants of the long-branch
runes, while...
-
contains runic characters.
Without proper rendering support, you may see
question marks, boxes, or
other symbols instead of
runes. Anglo-Saxon
runes or Anglo-Frisian...
-
Armanen runes (or
Armanen ****harkh) are 18 pseudo-
runes,
inspired by the
historic Younger ****hark
runes,
invented by
Austrian mysticist and
Germanic revivalist...
-
initial phoneme of the
first six
rune names: F, U, Þ, A, R and K) has 24
runes,
often arranged in
three groups of
eight runes; each
group is in
modern times...
-
Viking Age.
These stung runes were
regular runes with the
addition of
either a dot
diacritic or bar
diacritic to
indicate that the
rune stood for one of its...
-
versed in
runes,
including their magic applications. In
medieval sources,
notably the
Poetic Edda, the Sigrdrífumál
mentions "victory
runes" to be carved...
-
contains runic characters.
Without proper rendering support, you may see
question marks, boxes, or
other symbols instead of
runes.
Staveless runes were the...
- ****hark a rune into
three independent runes due to the
development of the
vowel system in Anglo-Frisian.
These three runes are ōs ᚩ (transliterated o), āc "oak"...