The Bergakker inscription is an Elder Futhark inscription discovered on the scabbard of a 5th-century sword. It was found in 1996 in the Dutch town of Bergakker, in the Betuwe, a region once inhabited by the Batavi. There is consensus that the find dates from the period 425-475 and that the inscription is either the singular direct attestation of Frankish (Franconian), or the earliest attestation of Old Dutch (Old Low Franconian).
Inscription
Runic writing at the time was used along the North Sea coast, in Frisia, but there are very few other extant inscriptions from Francia. The inscription can be read as
where V is a non-standard rune, apparently a vowel (variously read as e or u, or as "any vowel"), and * represents an unknown rune.
Several readings have been presented in literature. There seems to be a consensus that the ann is the past tense of unnan, corresponding to Modern Dutch , which means "give/bestow/grant". Several authors read the first word as a personal name in the genitive (indicating property), and the last word as meaning "flame, brand", a kenning for swords. The third word is read either as kusjam, meaning "chooser" or "chosen", corresponding to Modern Dutch keuze, or as ke(i)sjam meaning "cut" or "cutter", also referring to swords or sword wielders.
Scholarly interpretations
Graphemic peculiarities
The text features graphemic peculiarities that have led to ongoing scholarly debate. Modern imaging and analysis suggest that the first rune may have been misidentified in earlier publications, complicating the reading of the opening word. The inscription also contains double-lined and unusual runes not found in other Elder Futhark examples, prompting caution in transliteration and highlighting the complexity of the text.
See also
References
Sources
- Bammesberger, Alfred. Die Runeninschrift von Bergakker: Versuch einer Deutung, in: Pforzen und Bergakker. Neue Untersuchungen zu Runeninschriften, edited by Alfred Bammesberger in editorial collaboration with Gaby Waxenberger, Göttingen 1999 (= Historische Sprachforschung (Historical Linguistics): Ergänzungsheft 41, edited by Alfred Bammesberger and Günter Neumann), 180âÂÂ185.
- Bosman, A.V.A.J, & Looijenga, T. A runic inscription from Bergakker (Gelderland), the Netherlands, in: Amsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik, 46, 1996, 9âÂÂ16.
- Grünzweig, Friedrich E. Runeninschriften auf Waffen. Inschriften vom 2. Jahrhundert n. Chr. bis ins Hochmittelalter. Wien 2004 (= Wiener Studien zur Skandinavistik, 11).
- Looijenga, Tineke. The Bergakker Find and its Context, in: Pforzen und Bergakker. Neue Untersuchungen zu Runeninschriften, Göttingen 1999, 141âÂÂ151.
- Odenstedt, Bengt. The Bergakker Inscription: Transliteration, Interpretation, Message: Some Suggestions, in: Pforzen und Bergakker. Neue Untersuchungen zu Runeninschriften, Göttingen 1999, 163âÂÂ173.
- Quak, Arend, 'Wieder nach Bergakker', in: Amsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik, 53, 2000, 33âÂÂ39.
- Robins, Jenny, 'A Possibly Misidentified Rune and Other Graphemic Peculiarities on the Bergakker Scabbard Mouthpiece', in: Interdisciplinary Journal for Germanic Linguistics and Semiotic Analysis University of California, Berkeley, 81âÂÂ112. 2019
- Seebold, Elmar. Die Runeninschrift von Bergakker, in: Pforzen und Bergakker. Neue Untersuchungen zu Runeninschriften, Göttingen 1999, 157âÂÂ162.
- Vennemann, Theo. Note on the Runic Inscription of the Bergakker Scabbard Mount, in: Pforzen und Bergakker. Neue Untersuchungen zu Runeninschriften, Göttingen 1999, 152âÂÂ156.
External links