Welcome to official international Blog page for Galdrtanz – The Rune Dance. On these page you can find out what
Galdrtanz is all about, who are the teachers, where the classes take
place, and much more.
Please browse around and find out what
this amazing, spiritual, progressive and powerful dance practice can be.
What the Runes are?
Runes
are an ancient Germanic alphabet, used for writing, divination and magic. They
were used throughout northern Europe, Scandinavia, the British Isles, and
Iceland from about 100 B.C.E. to 1600 C.E. Runic inscriptions of great age have
even been found in North America, supporting stories that the Vikings arrived
in the Americas long before Columbus.
Runes
are an oracle from which one seeks advice. They work best if you detail your
current circumstances and then ask a specific question. Rune readings are
sometimes obscure. They hint toward answers, but you have to figure out the
details. This is when the rune casters intuition becomes paramount. Some times
the Runes "sing" to me, and their meaning becomes instantly clear.
Runic
divination or "rune casting" is not "fortunetelling" in the
sense that one actually sees the future. Instead, runes give one a means of
analyzing the path that one is on and a likely outcome. The future is not
fixed. It changes with everything one does. If one does not like the
prediction, one can always change paths.
Since
ancient times, runes have been used for divination and magic, in addition to
writing. The word "rune" actually means mystery, secret or whisper.
Each rune has esoteric meanings and properties associated with it, beyond its
mundane meaning and phonetic value. Each translates into a word or a phrase
signifying concepts important to the early peoples who used them, representing
the forces of nature and mind. Each rune has a story attached to it, a
relationship to a Norse God.
Odin,
the Norse High God of the Aesir, hung from the world tree, Yggdrasil, impaled
on his own spear, for nine days and nights in order to gain the knowledge of
runes. When the runes appeared below him, he reached down and took them up, and
the runic knowledge gave him power . He later passed on this knowledge to the
Vanir goddess Freya. She, in turn, taught him the magic of seidr. Heimdall, the
god who guarded the Rainbow Bridge, taught the runes to mankind.
Runic
alphabets first appeared among German tribes in central and eastern Europe.
Some runes symbols are likely to have been acquired from other alphabets, such
as the Greek, Etruscan, and the Early Roman. The runes were made of straight lines
to make the characters suitable for cutting into wood or stone. The earliest
runic inscriptions on stone are dated to the late 3rd century AD, although it
is probable that runic alphabets had been in use for some centuries before.
The
Old Germanic Runic alphabet or "Elder Futhark" contains 24 runes. The
first six runes of the alphabet spell out the word "FUTHARK". As the
runes spread northwards into Scandinavia, some rune symbols were dropped and
the alphabet was reduced to only 16 runes. Between 400 and 600 AD, three
Germanic tribes, the Angles, the Saxons and the Jutes, invaded Britain. They
brought the runes with them. The forms of several of the runes changed, notably
the runes for A/O, C/K, H, J, S, and Ng. Also, changes in the language led to nine
runes being added to the alphabet to compensate for the extra sounds, and
several runes were given different corresponding letters. This alphabet,
expanded to 33 symbols, has become known as the Anglo-Saxon Futhorc. The rune
names themselves have been passed down relatively intact.
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