- Runa ABC
in 17th century Sweden.
The
runology pioneerJohannes Bureus was a religious Christian, but he also thought that the Christian influence had replaced therunic alphabet with theLatin alphabet . His good reputation and his influential friends enabled him to acquire the royal privilege that no alphabet books could be printed without teaching the runic alphabet and no one was allowed to print them but himself. The result was that the first Swedish alphabet book ever printed had the purpose of teaching runes. [Enoksen 1998:182]The first copy of "Runa ABC" was printed in 1611. It contained the Latin alphabet in ABC order and the runic alphabet in both the
futhark order and in the order of the Latin alphabet. Bureus had also added the names of the runes, thephonemes they represented as well as some spelling rules. The booklet contained small Christian texts, which were written in runes on one side and in Latin letters on the opposite one. The last edition was printed in 1624, and it was more pedagogical than the first one, since the Latin letters were placed directly under the runes. Whereas the first edition ended with some prayers written in Latin letters, the 1624 edition had the final prayers written with runes, without any Latin transliteration.Enoksen 1998:183]Bureus did not succeed in making the runes replace the Latin alphabet since people were too familiar with the Latin letters. However, during the
Thirty Years' War , some Swedish officers encrypted their messages by writing with runes. [Enoksen 1998:184]Enoksen notes that it appears from the title page of Johannes Bureus' first edition that Bureus had some understanding of the
staveless runes in 1611, but that this has been denied by virtually all runologists.Notes
References
*Enoksen, Lars Magnar. (1998). "Runor : historia, tydning, tolkning". Historiska Media, Falun. sv icon ISBN 91-88930-32-7
ee also
*
Gothicismus
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