Sigtuna Plate 1
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The Sigtuna amulet I or Sigtuna plate I (signum U Fv1933;134, also U Sl5 and S 5) is an 11th-century runic
amulet An amulet, also known as a good luck charm or phylactery, is an object believed to confer protection upon its possessor. The word "amulet" comes from the Latin word amuletum, which Pliny's ''Natural History'' describes as "an object that protects ...
found in 1931 in Sigtuna,
Uppland Uppland () is a historical province or ' on the eastern coast of Sweden, just north of Stockholm, the capital. It borders Södermanland, Västmanland and Gästrikland. It is also bounded by lake Mälaren and the Baltic Sea. On the small uninhab ...
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Description

The amulet is a copper plate, 82 mm long, 27.5-29mm wide and 0.9mm thick. It was discovered at a depth of c. 1.2 metres in the 'Granhäcken' block of the medieval city of Sigtuna in March 1931, together with pottery fragments and bone combs. Additional excavations of the site were undertaken later the same year, but did not reveal anything new of interest.


Inscription

The inscription is carved in
boustrophedon Boustrophedon is a style of writing in which alternate lines of writing are reversed, with letters also written in reverse, mirror-style. This is in contrast to modern European languages, where lines always begin on the same side, usually the le ...
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Scandinavian Runic-text Database

The Scandinavian Runic-text Database offers the following "standard" readings:
Transliteration Transliteration is a type of conversion of a text from one writing system, script to another that involves swapping Letter (alphabet), letters (thus ''wikt:trans-#Prefix, trans-'' + ''wikt:littera#Latin, liter-'') in predictable ways, such as ...
: :§A þur/þurs, × , sarriþu × þursa trutin fliu þu nu=, , =funtin is :§B af þiʀ þriaʀ þraʀ ulf × ¶ af þiʀ niu noþiʀ ulfr iii ¶ isiʀ þis isiʀ auk is uniʀ ulfr niut lu¶¶fia Old West Norse
normalization Normalization or normalisation refers to a process that makes something more normal or regular. Most commonly it refers to: * Normalization (sociology) or social normalization, the process through which ideas and behaviors that may fall outside of ...
:§A ''Þór/Þurs sárriðu, þursa dróttinn! Fljú þú nú! Fundinn er u'' :§B ''Haf þér þrjár þrár, Ulfr! Haf þér níu nauðir, Ulfr! , Ulfr. Njót lyfja!'' Runic Swedish normalization :§A ''Þór/Þurs sárriðu, þursa dróttinn! Fliú þú nú! Fundinn es u'' :§B ''Haf þéʀ þríaʀ þráʀ, Ulfʀ! Haf þéʀ níu nauðiʀ, Ulfʀ! , Ulfʀ. Niút lyfia!'' English translation :§A Boil/Spectre of the wound-fever, lord of the giants! Flee now! You are found. :§B Have for yourself three pangs, Wolf! Have for yourself nine needs, Wolf! , Wolf. Make good use of the healing(-charm)!


Other interpretations


Pipping 1933

Old West Norse normalization: :''þurs sár-riðu, þursa dróttinn'' :''flý þú nú fuð, fundinn es(t)'' :''(h)af þér þríar þráar ulf'' :''(h)af þér níu nauðir ulf'' :''þí ísir þessir ísir'' :''auki es unir ulfr niót lyfia'' English translation: :Wound-fever’s demon, lord among demons, ''nunc fuge vulvam'', you are found. :Content yourself with threefold torment, monster! :Content yourself with ninefold need, monster! :To that attach the íss-runes, these íss-runes, that you may stay where you are. May you be affected by (my) curses, monster!


Pereswetoff-Morath 2019

As part of her dissertation "Viking-Age Runic Plates: Readings and Interpretations", Sofia Pereswetoff-Morath discusses this find. She offers the following interpretation: Transliteration: :A1 þurs‿×‿sarriþu × þursa : 2 trutin fliu þu nu͡funtin is :B1 af þiʀ þriaʀ þraʀ ulf × : 2 af þiʀ niu noþiʀ ulfr--- : 3 ifiʀ þisi siʀ auk is uniʀ ulfr niut lu ¶ fia Runic Swedish normalization: :A ''Þurs sārriðu, þursa drōttinn!'' :''Flȳ þū nū! Fundinn es (þurs sārriðu þursa drōttinn ...)'' :B ''(H)af þēʀ þrīaʀ þrāʀ, ulf, (h)af þēʀ nīu nauðiʀ!'' :Ulfʀ (h)æfiʀ þessi sēʀ auk es uniʀ ulfʀ. Niūt lyfia!'' English translation: :A Wound-fever's troll, lord of trolls! : You flee now! Found is (the wound-fever's troll, lord of trolls ...) :B May three torments take you, wolf, may nine needs take you! : The wolf takes these (torments and needs) and with these the wolf remains calm. Use the magic charm!


Theories

The inscription has been noted to have striking similarities with other Viking-age runic healing-charms, such as the Canterbury formula, written in Scandinavian runes but found in an Anglo-Saxon manuscript. It reads:Gustavson, Helmer. (2010) Sårfeberbenet från Sigtuna. ''Situne Dei'', 61-76. Translated from Swedish by Mindy MacLeod. :kuril sarþuara far þu nu funtin is tu þur uigi þik ¶ þorsa trutin iuril sarþuara uiþr aþra uari · :''Gyrils sārþvara far þū nū! Fundinn eʀ þū! Þōrr vīgi þik, þursa drōttinn, Gyrils sārþvara. Viðr aðravari.'' :Gyrill's wound-tap, you go now! You are found! May Thor hallow you, lord of the trolls. Gyrill's wound-tap. Against pus in the veins (blood poisoning). The phrase 'nine needs' (niu noþiʀ) is attested in other instances of pagan magic, such as the inscription on the Danish
Ribe healing-stick The Ribe healing stick (with Rundata signum DR EM85;493, also known as DK SJy41) is a pinewood stick found at Ribe, Denmark, with a heavily pagan-inspired Christian spell. It dates to circa 1300 CE. Description Although ostensibly Christian, the ...
, the Icelandic poem Sigrdrífumál and spell-book
Galdrabók The (, ''Book of Magic'') is an Icelandic grimoire dated to ca. 1600. It is a small manuscript containing a collection of 47 spells and sigils/staves. The grimoire was compiled by four people, possibly starting in the late 16th century and going ...
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See also

*
Kvinneby amulet The Kvinneby amulet ( Öl SAS1989;43) is an 11th-century runic amulet found in the mid-1950s buried in the village of Södra Kvinneby in Öland, Sweden. The amulet is a square copper plate measuring approximately 5 cm on each side. Near one e ...
*
Ribe skull fragment The Ribe skull fragment (DR EM85;151B in Rundata, also known as DK SJy39) is a section of human skull bone inscribed with runes and unearthed in 1973 in an archaeological excavation at Ribe, Denmark. It dates to circa 725 CE. Description The sku ...


Notes


References

* {{cite book , last = Pereswetoff-Morath , first = Sofia , translator-last = Macleod , translator-first = Mindy , date = 2019 , title = Viking-Age runic plates: readings and interpretations. , series = Acta academiae regiae Gustavi Adolphi, 0065-0897; 155, Runrön, 1100-1690; 21 , publication-place = Uppsala , publisher = Kungl. Gustav Adolfs akademien för svensk folkkultur , url = https://gustavadolfsakademien.bokorder.se/en-US/article/3792/viking-age-runic-plates , isbn = 9789187403330


Further reading

* Eriksson, Manne & Zetterholm, Delmar O., 1933: En amulett från Sigtuna. Ett tolkningsförsök. ''Fornvännen'' 28. Stockholm, 129–156. * Lindquist, Ivar, 1932: ''Religiösa runtexter'' 1, ''Sigtuna-galdern: runinskriften på en amulett funnen i Sigtuna 1931. Ett tydningsförslag'' (Skrifter utgivna av Vetenskapssocieteten i Lund 15). Lund. * — 1936: Trolldomsrunorna från Sigtuna. ''Fornvännen'' 31, 29–46. * Nordén, Arthur, 1943: Bidrag till svensk runforskning. Antikvariska studier 1 (KVHAA:s handlingar 55). Stockholm, 166–172 * Olsén, Magnus B., 1940: Sigtuna-amuletten. Nogen tolkningsbidrag. ''Avhandlinger. Norske videnskaps-akademi i Oslo'' II, Historisk-filosofisk klasse. Oslo. * Pipping, Hugo, 1933: Sigtuna-amuletten. ''Studier i nordisk filologi'' 23:4 (Skrifter utgivna av Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland, 238). Helsinki. * Gustavson, Helmer, 2009: Sl 5 Sigtuna, Kv. Granhäcken. ''Runristade lösföremål från Sigtuna.'' Manuscript. See Sl under internet sources. * Gustavson, Helmer & Källström, Magnus, 2016: Runbleck från Sigtuna. Några nyfynd från Svarta jorden och museets magasin. ''Situne Dei'', 14–25 11th-century inscriptions 1930s archaeological discoveries Archaeology of Sweden Runic inscriptions Historical runic magic Norse paganism Sources on Germanic paganism Occult texts Amulets