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Sandavágur stone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sandavágur stone
WritingMedieval runes
Created13th century
Discovered1917 AD
Sandavágur, Faroe Islands
Present locationSandavágur Church
CultureNorse
Rundata IDFR 2 M
Text – Native
Old Norse: Þorkell Ǫnundar sonr, austmaðr af Rogalandi, bygði þenna stað fyrst.
Translation
Þorkell Ǫnundr's son, man of the east from Rogaland, lived in this place first.

The Sandavágur stone (FR 2 M) is a runestone that was discovered in the town of Sandavágur on the Faroe Islands in 1917.[1] The stone can today be seen in the Sandavágur Church. [2]

The inscription describes Þorkell, a man from Rogaland, Norway who claims to have lived in the Sandavágur area first. He is presumably one of the first settlers, if not the very first one. In both runes and language the Sandavágur stone corresponds to what is known from Rogaland around the 13th century.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ According to the Sandavágur article.
  2. ^ "Runes in History - The Faroese Stones". Runes 101. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  3. ^ FR 2 - Sandavagur runesten
This page was last edited on 2 March 2021, at 00:35
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