Abstract
Abstract
In 2021–2023, several rune-inscribed sandstone fragments were discovered by archaeologists of the Museum of
Cultural History, University of Oslo, at a Roman Iron Age grave field by the Svingerud road at Hole in eastern Norway. Several of
these fragments fit together as parts of one larger sandstone slab. The main fragment with multiple inscriptions was unearthed in
a flat grave (cremation) in November 2021. Radiocarbon dating of the organic material dated the burial to before 300 CE (Solheim et al., forthcoming). This article provides a detailed runological and linguistic
account of the inscribed fragments, as of July 2023. The focus is on the main finds, while the work on numerous small fragments is
ongoing. This find may shed new light on the features and functions of early runic writing.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Stationen der frühen nordgermanischen Sprachgeschichte;NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution;2024-04-18