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The runic inscription found in the Kleines Schulerloch cave, Altmühltal, near Essing, Bavaria, was discovered in 1937. It reads :''birg : leub : selbrade'', probably meaning "Birg, beloved of Selbrad", next to a drawing of an ibex or stag scratched into the stone (which is, however, of Pleistocene age, far older than the inscription). From the 1950s on, the inscription has been considered a hoax by many scholars. However, the discovery of a parallel inscription in grave 172 of the "Unterer Stollen" cemetery in Bad Krozingen in 2001, reading :''boba : leub | agirike'' revived discussions regarding the authenticity of the Kleines Schulerloch inscription. Nevertheless, in 2003, Looijenga concluded that the inscription is an obvious falsification. In 2012, Findell, while accepting the Bad Krozingen inscription as genuine, still considered the Kleines Schulerloch inscription to be suspect. ==References== * A. Bammesberger, G. Waxenberger (eds.), ''(Das ''fuþark'' und seine einzelsprachlichen Weiterentwicklungen )'', Walter de Gruyter (2006), ISBN 978-3-11-019008-3, 137-393. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kleines Schulerloch inscription」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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