Rök Stone Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Rök Stone (In Swedish Rökstenen) is the most famous of rune stones, featuring the longest known runic inscription in stone. Many also consider it to be the most beautiful of all rune stones. It is placed by the church in Rök, Ostrogothia, Sweden.
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2 Inscription 3 Interpretation 4 Speculation 5 See also |
The stone was discovered built into the wall of the church in the 19th century and removed from the church wall a few decades later. It was probably carved in the 800s, judging from the runic style. (Short-twig runes.) It is covered with runes on five sides, all except the base part, that was to be put under ground. A few parts of the incription are damaged, but most of it remains readable.
The name "Rök Stone" is something of a tautology: the stone is named after the village, "Rök", but the village is probably named after the stone, "Rauk" or "Rök" meaning "stone" in the Old Norse language.
The stone is unique in that it contains a fragment of what is believed to be a lost piece of Norse mythology. It also makes a historical reference to Ostrogothic king Theodoric the Great.
The inscription is partially encrypted in two ways: by displacement and by using special cipher runes. The inscription is probably intentionally hard to read, perhaps as part of a magic ritual or just to show off the carver's abilities in runic.
The following is one interpretation of the text: most researchers agree on how the runes shall be deciphered, but the interpretation of the text and the meaning is still a subject of debate. The first part is written in ljóđaháttr meter, and the part about Theoderic is written in the fornyrdislag meter.
Apart from the mentioned Theodoric and the Norse god Thor, the people and mythological creatures mentioned are unknown to us. Some interpretations have been suggested:
The two war-booties are likely to be two precious weapons, such as a sword and a shield or a helmet. Several stories like these exist in old Germanic poems.
The Hreidgoths mentioned are a poetic name for the Ostrogoths, appearing in other sources. To what sea the name Hreiđsea referred is unknown. Considering the location of the Ostrogoths at the time of Theoderic, it should be a name for the Mediterranean.
The part about Theodoric (who died in 526 A.D.) probably concerns the statue of him in Ravenna, which was moved to Aachen by Charlemagne. This statue was very famous and portrayed Theodoric with his shield hanging across his left shoulder, and his lance extended in his right hand. The Mćrings is a name for Theodoric's family. According to the old English Deor poem from the 900s, Theodoric ruled the "castle of the Mćrings" (Ravenna) for thirty years. The words about Theodoric may be connected to the previous statement, so the stone is talking about the death of Theodoric: he died approximately nine generations before the stone was carved, and the church considered him a cruel and godless emperor, thus some may have said that he died for his guilt. The dead person may just as well be someone else though.
Gunnrr whose "horse sees fodder on the battlefield" is presumably a Valkyrie (previously known from Norse mythology), and her "horse" is a Wolf.
The story about the twenty kings says that the twenty were four groups of five brothers each, and in each of these four groups, all brothers shared the same names, and their fathers were four brothers (4 x 5 = 20). This piece of mythology seems to have been common knowledge at the time, but has been totally lost. The Sjólund that is mentioned has often been interpreted as Sjćlland (nowadays a part of Denmark).
Starting with the Ingold-part, the text becomes increasingly hard to read. While the first part is written in the 16 common short-twig runes in the younger fuţark, Varin here switches over to using the older 24-type fuţark and cipher runes. It has been assumed that this is intentional, and that the rows following this point concerns legends connected specifically to Varin and his tribe.
After the word It is Vélinn ... follows the word Nit. This word is yet uniterpreted, and its meaning is unclear.
There have been numerous speculations written about the stone and its purpose. The most common include:
This is an Article on Rök Stone. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Rök Stone About the stone
Inscription
Interpretation
Speculation
See also
A common problem when researching things Norse is that the spelling of names varies much depending on one's country of origin. In the articles presented here, several common forms of the names will be presented. For more information see:
