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The Lindholm "amulet", listed as DR 261 in Rundata, is a bone piece, carved into the shape of a rib, dated to the 2nd to 4th centuries (the late Roman Iron Age) and has a runic inscription. It was found in 1840 in Skåne, Sweden, while cutting peat from a bog. This cut the bone in half and resulted in the destruction of one rune in the second line of text.〔 The inscription reads : : :''ekerilazsa()ilagazhateka:'' :''aaaaaaaazzznn()bmuttt:alu:''〔(Project Samnordisk Runtextdatabas Svensk ) - Rundata.〕 The first line is transcribed into Proto-Norse as either ''Ek erilaz sa Wilagaz haite'ka'' or ''Ek erilaz Sawilagaz haite'ka''. This translates to "I am (an) ''erilaz'', I am called the wily" (or "I am called ''Sawilagaz''). If the word in first line is translated as a name, ''Sawilagaz'' means "the one of the Sun (Sowilo)." If the word is translated as "the wily" or "crafty one" or "deceitful one," then it may be related to a byname of Odin or another god.〔 The sequence in the second line contains a "magical" string of runes concluding in ''alu''. The three consecutive Tiwaz runes as an invocation of the god Tiwaz, and the eight Ansuz runes as an invocation or symbolic list of eight gods. ==See also== *List of names of Odin *Runic magic 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「Lindholm amulet」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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