runic ‹obliterated› inscription - Definition. Was ist runic ‹obliterated› inscription
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Was (wer) ist runic ‹obliterated› inscription - definition

MONUMENT
Danish Runic Inscription 282; Danish Runic Inscription 283; Danish Runic Inscription 284; Danish Runic Inscription 285; Danish Runic Inscription 286
  • The newly rediscovered '''DR 285'''.
  • DR 282
  • DR 283
  • DR 284

Södermanland Runic Inscription 328         
  • Sö 328 is located in Tynäs, Södermanland, Sweden.
SWEDISH RUNIC INSCRIPTION
Sodermanland Runic Inscription 328
Sö 328 is the Rundata catalog number for a runic inscription on a Viking Age memorial runestone which is located in Tynäs, which is about one kilometer east of Strängnäs, Södermanland County, Sweden, which is in the historic province of Södermanland.
Västergötland Runic Inscription 73         
  • The Synnerby church.
Vastergotland Runic Inscription 73
Västergötland Runic Inscription 73 or Vg 73 is the Rundata catalog number for a Viking Age memorial runestone that is located near the Synnerby church, which is about nine kilometers west of Skara. The stone was raised in memory of a man who was a thegn.
Södermanland Runic Inscription 226         
  • Photograph of Sö 226 in 1900.
SWEDISH RUNIC INSCRIPTION
Sodermanland Runic Inscription 226
Södermanland Runic Inscription 226 or Sö 226 is the Rundata catalog listing for a Viking Age memorial runestone located in Norra Stutby, which is about eight kilometers north of Sorunda, Stockholm County, Sweden, which was in the historic province of Södermanland.

Wikipedia

Hunnestad Monument

The Hunnestad Monument (Swedish: Hunnestadsmonumentet), listed as DR 282 through 286 in the Rundata catalog, was once located at Hunnestad at Marsvinsholm north-west of Ystad, Sweden. It was the largest and most famous of the Viking Age monuments in Scania, and in Denmark, only comparable to the Jelling stones. The monument was destroyed during the end of the 18th century by Eric Ruuth of Marsvinsholm, probably between 1782 and 1786 when the estate was undergoing sweeping modernization, though the monument survived long enough to be documented and depicted.

When the antiquary Ole Worm (1588–1654) explored the monument, it consisted of eight stones. Five of them were image stones, and two of those image stones also had runic inscriptions. In the eighteenth century, all the stones were relocated or destroyed. Only three of the stones of the monument were recovered during the 19th century, and are today on display at the Kulturen museum in Lund. For a long time they were considered the only stones remaining, but on December 16, 2020 a fourth stone, DR 285 (number 6, in the picture), was discovered during excavations for a sewage line in Ystad municipality. Lying with its image facing up, it had been used in a bridge construction over the Hunnestad stream.