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Runic

From Wikipedia.

Script details

See all script details: code, region, status and more
Code Runr
Script type alphabet
Region European
Status Historical
Direction LTR
Baseline bottom
Case no
White space none
Complex behaviors
OpenType code runr
ISO 15924 Numeric Code / Key 211 (left-to-right alphabetic)

Explanation of script details

Script description

The Runic alphabets were used throughout Northern Europe from the 1st to the 7th century AD.

Read the full description…There are various conflicting theories as to the runes’ origins; some scholars suggest they were developed in Denmark and spread southwards to Europe, while others suggest that they were a German invention which spread both northwards and southwards. Runic inscriptions have been found as far south as Istanbul.

Runic writing has a distinctive appearance characterized by angular letters (runes) having no horizontal lines. This is thought to be because the runes were designed to be inscribed into wood; horizontal lines would have been difficult to see against a horizontal woodgrain. The direction of writing in early inscriptions was variable, but in later inscriptions the tendency was to write from left to right. Dots were sometimes used to separate words, although spaces were generally not.

Runes were used for a number of purposes, including trade (ordering goods, stock descriptions, records of debts owed etc), personal communication, graffiti, political commentaries, and religious or magical recitations.

Runic writing went through various phases, the most well-known of which are elder futhark, younger futhark, and Rök (or short-twig) futhark. Elder futhark (also called Germanic futhark / runes) is attested from the year 150. It appears to have been developed specifically to match the phonology of the Proto-Norse language; there were twenty-four symbols each representing one sound. Over the next 700 years, the script evolved into younger futhark. This variant had only sixteen letters, and the sound/symbol relationship was less precise in that many symbols represented two or more sounds. Rök futhark was essentially the same, structurally, as younger futhark, but the shapes of the runes were different.

Runes were gradually replaced by the Latin alphabet as Christianity spread through Europe and by the 11th century had died out completely.

Languages that use this script

LanguageWriting System
Code
Writing System
Status
SLDR/CLDR
locale
Regional
variants
Danishda-Runrin use da-Runr-001
Englishen-Runrin use en-Runr-001
Faroesefo-Runrin use fo-Runr-001
German, Standardde-Runrobsolete de-Runr-DE (Germany)
Icelandicis-Runrin use is-Runr-001
See complete list

Unicode status

In The Unicode Standard, Runic script implementation is discussed in Chapter 8 Europe-II — Ancient and Other Scripts.

Resources