World’s oldest runestone may have been signed by a woman, researchers say
Perhaps a woman named the world dated Runstone, researchers in Norway I found, while collecting a 2000 -year -old puzzle.
The inscription begins with the word “I” in the Ronnie Textual Program, followed by the name of the writer and the verb that refers to writing, before it ends with the word “Ron”, the researchers wrote earlier this month in the magazine of ancient times after studying part of the stone located in the location of the grave in Hall, a small municipality in southern Norway to the east of the capital, Oslo.
“The text” will say, I am, I, the name of Ron Enboodi, wrote the Ronnie. “
“It is also a kind of engraving that has similarities in some other romantic inscriptions, a person who informs us mainly that they have done this inscription,” added Zilmer, Professor of Runology at the Cultural History Museum at the University of Oslo.
Rooney stone is visible in a section of excavation.
The researchers said that they believe that the Jrinist alphabet is inspired by the Roman alphabet, which formed the basic blocks in the first centuries. It has been widely used in Scandinavian countries until the late Middle Ages.
Reserve inscriptions are found on things such as bone knife and iron knife from Denmark and comb, which are dated archaeologists to about 150 meters in the history of other stones to about 700 m
You often carry messages, including talismans to restore the words of the dead and magic.
But very little is known about its development because it varied over time, and its decoding may be difficult without an archaeological context.
Reconstruction and accompanying illustrations reveal Rooney’s inscription.
The latest research indicates that shrapnel, the first of which was discovered in 2021, was part of one board. The researchers said that this discovery makes scientists one step closer to understanding the development of the language and using these stones.
Two years later, researchers found more shrapnel and seems that the text program on it continues through shrapnel, indicating that they are all part of one stone.
“They managed to find two additional pieces, and they are perfectly proportional to the middle part of one of the inscriptions, and they gave us almost a complete inscription,” Zilmer said.
Due to the damage and wreath of the stone, she added that determining the exact text, including the conference name, is “a little difficult”, but what caught the attention of researchers in particular is an advantage in the name that indicates ending with “-U”.
Excavations at Svingerud, West Oslo, Norway.
In the old text program, she said that this will indicate the name of a possible woman, if she confirmed, “It will be the first known record for Ron’s novel.”
Since the fragments in the hole were buried alongside the remains of the Holocaust, scientists had the crucial archaeological context that allowed them to use a radioactive Crohn to confirm the fragments dated 50 BC and 275 AD
“We may have a series of events that are revealed here, including different people,” said Zilmer. “It may be a stone that combines different purposes.”
She said that although a lot of research is still continuing, “we still miss important parts, so there are clear gaps.”
“It is a holes, but it will be very interesting to see to what extent we can get this, and the number of these small fragments, and some are also listed, which may be able to contact each other.”
This article was originally published on NBCNEWS.com