- Peorð
runic|ᛈ is the rune denoting the sound "p" in the
Elder Futhark runic alphabet , in the Anglo-Saxonrune poem named peorð. It does not appear in theYounger Futhark . In the poem, it is glossed with the enigmatic::runic|ᛈ "peorð byþ symble plega and hlehter / wlancum [on middum] , ðar wigan sittaþ / on beorsele bliþe ætsomne":"Peorð is a source of recreation and amusement to the great, where warriors sit blithely together in the banqueting-hall."The name is not comprehensible from Old English. In the
Gothic alphabet , the letters .The Common Germanic name could be referring to a
pear -tree (or generally a fruit-tree). A common interpretation is that "peorð" refers to a sort ofwoodwind instrument. From "peorð", aProto-Germanic name *perðu, *perþō or *perþaz is sometimes reconstructed, with unknown meaning. The expected Proto-Germanic term for "pear tree" would be "*pera-trewô" ("*pera" being, however, a post-Proto-Germanic loan, eitherWest Germanic , or Common Germanic, if Gothic "pairþra" meant "pear tree", fromVulgar Latin "pirum" (plural "pira"), itself of unknown origin. Since theElder Futhark itself is post-Proto-Germanic, attested from the2nd century , an early loanword as a letter name is perfectly possible). TheOgham letter nameCeirt , glossed as "apple tree", may in turn be a loan from Germanic intoPrimitive Irish .The earliest attestation of the rune is in the
Kylver Stone "futhark" row (ca. AD 400). The earliest example in a linguistic context (as opposed to an "abecedarium ") is already infuthorc , in the Kent II, III and IV coin inscriptions (the personal names "pada" and "æpa"/"epa"), dated to ca. AD 700. OnSt. Cuthbert's coffin (AD 698), a "p" rune takes the place of GreekΡ . TheWesteremden yew-stick (ca. AD 750) has "op hæmu" "at home" and "up duna" "on the hill".Looijenga (1997) speculates that the "p" rune arose as a variant of the "b" rune, parallel to the secondary nature of
Ogham "peith ". The uncertainty surrounding the rune is a consequence of the rarity of the "*p" phoneme inProto-Germanic , itself due to the rarity of its parent-phoneme "*b" (or glottalised *p’) in Proto-Indo-European.The rune is discontinued in
Younger Futhark , which expresses /p/ with the "b" rune, for example on theViking Age Skarpaker Stone ,:"iarþ sal rifna uk ubhimin"forOld Norse :"Jörð skal rifna ok upphiminn.":"Earth shall be rent, and the heavens above."References
*A. Bammesberger, G. Waxenberger (eds.), "Das "fuþark" und seine einzelsprachlichen Weiterentwicklungen", Walter de Gruyter (2006), ISBN 3-11-019008-7, 85-98 (Birkhan), 418f. (Schulte).
ee also
*
Runic alphabet
*Rune poem
*Gothic alphabet
*Ogham
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