Runic stone from Kingittorsuaq


Runic stone from Kingittorsuaq

Runes of Kingittorsuaq (Gr. 1) - A small rune stone from Greenland, currently in the collections of the National Museum in Copenhagen.

The monument was discovered in 1824 on a small uninhabited island of Kingittorsuaq on the west coast of Greenland. The stone measures only 10 cm in length. The inscription was engraved by three Norman hunters who had traveled as far as 73 ° north latitude, far north of the human settlement. Its content is: ÷ el = likr * sikua ths: so = n: r * ok * job = no: torta = r son: ¶ ÷ ok enri * us son: laukardak * in: for * gakndag ¶ hloþu * ua = rda tea * ok rydu: ??????

What it means: Erling son of Sighwata, Bjarni son of Thordha and Eindridhi son of Odda, raised the hill on Saturday before the battle and paved the way.

The "fight day" mentioned in the text is April 25th. The inscription is completed with seven encrypted runes, according to researchers, the inscription year is probably 1333.

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