- Undley bracteate
The Undley bracteate, a
5th century bracteate found in Undley Common, nearLakenheath ,Suffolk (coord|52.40|N|00.48|E|region:GB). It bears the earliest known inscription that can be argued to be inAnglo-Frisian Futhorc (as opposed to Common GermanicElder Futhark ). A picture of the bracteate can be seen [http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_image.aspx?
] .The image on the bracteate is an adaptation of an "Urbs Roma" coin type issued by
Constantine the Great , conflating the helmeted head of the emperor and the image ofRomulus and Remus suckled by the wolf on one face. With a diameter of 2.3 cm, it weighs 2.24 grams. It may have originated in northern Germany or southern Scandinavia, and brought to England with an early Anglo-Saxon settler. The inscription reads::ᚷᚫᚷᚩᚷᚫᛗᚫᚷᚫᛗᛖᛞᚢ [the vowels of the first word are actually written as ligatures] :"g͡æg͡og͡æ – mægæ medu", The "o" being the earliest known instance of an " os" rune runic|ᚫ.
The "mægæ medu" is interpreted " for the ", i.e. "reward for relatives" referring to the bracteate itself. The "gægogæ" appears to be some magical invocation or battle cry, comparable to the "g͡ag͡ag͡a" on the
Kragehul I lance-shaft: in both cases the "ga" ("gæ", "go") are written asbindrune s, that is the X shape of thegyfu has side-twigs attached for the vowel. Since the entire difference of "æ" vs. "o" consists in slightly bent twigs, in a context of a magical chant or cry rather than actual words, the inscription presents only tenuous evidence of incipientAnglo-Frisian brightening .References
*J. Hines and B. Odemstedt, "The Undley bracteate and its runic inscription", Studien zur Sachsenforschungen, 6 (1987), pp. 73-94.
*J. Hines, "The Scandinavian character of Anglian England in the pre-Viking period", BAR British Series 124 (Oxford, 1984), pp. 204-9.
*S. E. West, "Gold bracteate from Undley, Suffolk", Frühmittelalterliche Studien, 17 (1983), p. 459.
*M. Axboe, "The Scandinavian gold bracteates", Acta Archaeologica, 52 (1982), p. 75.External links
* [http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/pe_mla/g/gold_bracteate-1.aspx British Museum page]
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