The five runic letters spell out the word "hirila," which in the Proto-Norse language spoken at the time means "small sword."
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That's a little funny someone cared to write it.
It was for the danish as a second language classroom, clearly
I was so curious. Thank you.
Does what it says on the tin
Aaah, Kamelåså
Syklekugle?
Oh. Is there writing in Denmark?
There used to be but they runed it
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Dating back to around 150 years AD, the iron knife was found in a grave in a small cemetery east of Odense, in central Denmark.
The five runic letters spell out the word "hirila," which in the Proto-Norse language spoken at the time means "small sword."
Bonde said "the person who owned it wanted to show he was, or wanted to be, some kind of warrior," but in the museum's Facebook post, it said archaeologists were unable to confirm whether the "small sword" label had referred specifically to the knife or its owner.
A small comb made of bone discovered in 1865 and inscribed with runes dates back to around the same period as the knife, Bonde said.
Denmark's most famous runestones, erected in the 10th century in the town of Jelling, have longer inscriptions.
Strongly identified with the creation of Denmark as a nation state, they were raised by Harald Bluetooth, in honor of his parents King Gorm and Queen Thyra.
The original article contains 406 words, the summary contains 162 words. Saved 60%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!