Ramsund carving
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Ramsund carving | |
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Name: | Ramsund carving |
Rundata ID: | Sö 101 |
Country: | Sweden |
Region: | Södermanland |
City/Village: | Ramsund |
Produced: | 11th century |
Runemaster: | unknown |
Text - Native: | |
siriþR kiarþi bur þosi muþiR alriks tutiR urms fur salu hulmkirs faþur sukruþar buata sis | |
Text - English: | |
Sigriþr, Alrikr's mother, Ormr's daughter, made this bridge for the soul of Holmgeirr, father of Sigruþr, her husbandman | |
Other resources: | |
Rune stones - Runic alphabet |
The Ramsund carving also known as the Sigurd carving is a runic carving with the official name Södermanlands runinskrifter 101 (Sö 101). The carving is not quite a rune stone as it is not carved into a stone, but into a flat rock close to Ramsund, Eskilstuna Municipality, Sudermannia, Sweden. It is believed to have been carved around year 1000. The carving clearly depicts the story of Sigurd in the Volsunga saga in its nordic form. It is generally considered an important piece of norse art.
The writing is ambiguous, but the general interpretation, based on carvings on other rune stones found nearby, is that Sigriþr (a woman) was the wife of Sigruþr who has died. Holmgeirr is her father in law. Alrikr has erected another stone for his father, named Spjut, so even though Alrikr is the son of Sigriþr, he was not the son of Sigruþr.
The inspiration for using the legend of Sigurd for the inscription is based on the fact that Sigruþr probably was the name the hero originally had in Scandinavia. Sigurðr is an Icelandic or Norwegian corruption of the German Siegfried as the correct Old Norse would have been Sigruþr (Sigröd)[1].
It is raised by the same aristocratic family as the Bro Runestone and the Kjula Runestone.