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Rudiments of Runelore by Stephen Pollington

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The purpose of this book is to provide both a comprehensive introduction for those coming to the subject for the first time, and a handy and inexpensive reference work for those with some knowledge of the subject. The Abecedarium Nordmannicum and the Engl

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First published January 1, 1995

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Stephen Pollington

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5 stars
63 (49%)
4 stars
44 (34%)
3 stars
17 (13%)
2 stars
3 (2%)
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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Apostate.
135 reviews6 followers
October 26, 2015
An excellent book dealing with runes in a linguistic (not New Age mystical bunk)sense. It presents several Runic alphabets, deals with the history of runes & inscriptions, and gives several poems concerning runes in Old English & Old Icelandic. My only beef with the book is its small size: it barely has 80 pages of material. Each chapter could be expanded into a book of its own.
Profile Image for Devon.
107 reviews25 followers
August 10, 2015
An excellent resource on Germanic runes, including linguistic information, discussion of inscription, the rune poems, and the different runic systems. It is a very small book, easily read in a day or so, but it has a lot of good starting information, including a list of texts for further reading for the interested reader. I would have maybe liked to have seen more discussion of the different rune poem traditions, but I realize that might have made the book far weightier than the author intended.
Profile Image for Miles.
13 reviews
February 9, 2022
A bit dense at parts for someone with little to no linguistic background, but overall a well-researched read. Above all, it provides what I felt was a very balanced and accessible insight into runic history and inscriptions amongst a vast array of literature that is either hopelessly academic or filled with wild flights of occult fancy.
Profile Image for Joseph F..
447 reviews15 followers
November 6, 2013
Good introduction to the runes. I liked the rune poems and his description of the elder futhark.
Some parts a little difficulty understanding; the science of runic interpretation can be thorny, even for an introduction. (get it, "thorny", for the thorn rune! haha)
12 reviews
February 2, 2023
Good info. Mostly focuses on the Anglo-Saxon futhork. Unfortunately, I've heard this author and I think the publishing company might lean towards white nationalist ideals. I'm not 100% sure, but I didn't come across anything that was racist in this book. He stuck to the runes without anything extra. Hopefully, I'm wrong and they aren't terrible people. Just in case I bought this book used.
52 reviews
July 16, 2017
A fine academic introduction to runes. For such a short book, it's chock full onf information on what is known about the ancient writing systems.
Profile Image for Jason Goodrick.
41 reviews
April 28, 2020
A good introduction to Runelore, this little book will help you decide if you want to study further into the subject, or be sufficient if you want a basic understanding.
Profile Image for cinnamilk.
46 reviews
July 29, 2025
a solid introduction to germanic runes from an academic/scholarly perspective

4/5
Profile Image for Kjǫlsigʀ.
126 reviews28 followers
September 26, 2025
A lovely (mundane rather than magickal) overview with some nice attention to the use of runes in ancient cryptography.
Profile Image for Alexandra.
23 reviews16 followers
February 3, 2024
It can be tricky to find books on this topic that are both accessible and authoritative. Some can be so academic and dense that (if you can even get your hands on them) they're hard to parse without a degree in linguistics, while others tend to devolve into esoteric conjecture. Amidst those extremes this book was a delightful find and proved to be exactly what it claims to be: an affordable, comprehensive and accessible introduction and reference work.

For its 82 pages I found it to be immensely enlightening and surprisingly thorough in the information it manages to cover in that space. What runes are, how they varied across the cultures that used them, and how and why they were used are all covered. Pollington clearly knows his subject matter well and treats it with great respect. While he provides a lot of historical and archaeological examples of runic inscriptions and uses those to illustrate what we do know, he also takes care to point out that there is much that is still conjecture, and much that we can never know for certain. The linguistic details were fascinating, but my favourite aspect was certainly the glimpses into the culture and worldview of the people groups that used these runes.

Loved this particular Old English rune-poem for ᛡ:

Iar byþ eafix and ðeah a bruceþ
fodres on foldan, hafaþ fægerne eard
wætre beworpen, ðær he wynnum leofaþ.

Beaver is a riverfish yet it always enjoys
Food on land, has a fine dwelling
Surrounded by water where it lives happily

Isn't that just wholesome?
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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