Skalds, Runes, and Voice

2010; Brepols; Volume: 6; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1484/j.vms.1.102139

ISSN

2030-9902

Autores

Mats Malm,

Tópico(s)

Ancient and Medieval Archaeology Studies

Resumo

The word skáld is often explained as deriving from words for ‘abuse’, and the skald would thus have received his name as a ‘defamer’. This paper tests the arguments of that interpretation and arrives at the conclusion that ‘skáld’ is more probably derived from words for ‘sound’: the skald proclaims. Through a discussion of the word rún, the argument is made that the runes could be understood as sounding in a way analogous to the activity of the skald: in an oral society, writing would have been understood as the carrier of voice. The name of one of the most prolific rune carvers, Œpir, has seemed mysterious: why would anyone call himself ‘the screamer’ or ‘the loud-mouth’? In this paper, it is suggested that if the runes were considered as voice carriers, Œpir in the sense of ‘the proclaimer’ would be a congenial signature for a rune carver — or for several carvers.

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