150990
Published: 13th June, 2011
Last edited: 9th June, 2011
Created: 9th June, 2011
Clone of fuTarkuRnord.
HOW TO USE THIS FONT
This is an Anglo-Friesian Futhorc.
This Futhorc is an extended and revised version of the elder 24-character Futhark. It was developed and used in Frisland (Holland) and Anglo-Saxon England from around year 500.
There are different versions of the Futhorc containing between 28 and 33 characters. This version contains 29 characters.
Most of the runes in the Futhorc correspond with letters in the Latin alphabet.
Those Runes you should write using lowercase keys only.
There are no Runes corresponding to numbers.
Some Runes are used for more than one Latin letter in this font.
The s-rune is used for s and z in this font.
The k-rune is use for k and q in this font.
The w-rune is used for v and w in this font.
These uppercase keys have special Runes connected to them.
The A-key will get jou the "ae"-Rune.
The E-key will get you the "ea"-Rune.
The I-key will get you the "ï"-Rune.
The N-key will get you the "ng"-Rune.
The T-key will get you the "th"-Rune. This rune also represents the “dt”-sound.
The space-key will give you a dot that sometimes was used between words. The point-key will get you a double dot. This is a clone of fuTarkuRnord
260992
Published: 9th June, 2011
Last edited: 9th June, 2011
Created: 2nd June, 2011
HOW TO USE THIS FONT
This is a medieval Rune Alphabet and it contains 27 letters (Runes). This font contains some additional characters.
The medieval Rune Alphabet is developed from the Viking time long twig (långkvist) and short twig (kortkvist) Futhark Runes.
The Rune Alphabet is not written in the order of the older Rune “alphabets”, f u th a r k, but in the same order as the Latin Alphabet.
There are no special upper or lower case Runes. Using this font you should generally speaking just use lower case keys.
Some Runes are used for more than one Latin letter in this font.
The i-rune is used for i and j in this font.
The k-rune is used for k, q and x in this font.
The s-rune is used for c, and z in this font. If c have the sound value "k", use k instead.
The v-rune is used for v and w in this font.
These uppercase keys have special Runes connected to them
The A-key will get you the "ae"-Rune.
The D-key will get you the "dh"-Rune.
The O-key will get you the "oe"-Rune.
The T-key will get you the "th"-Rune. This rune also represents the “dt”-sound.
These Upper Case Keys will get you alternative Runes to the once given by the same Lower Case Keys;
P, S, Y and Z
Other Upper Case Keys gives you the same runes as the same Lower Case Keys.
The space-key will give you a dot that sometimes was used between words. The point-key will get you a double dot.
There are no special Runes for numbers. Runes have however been used to represent numbers in medieval Almanacs
In the Gyllental (the aureus numerus) Runes
1=f, 2=u, 3=th, 4=o (which originally was “a”), 5=r, 6=k, 7=h, 8=n, 9=i
10=a, 11=s, 12=t, 13=b, 14=1, 15=m, 16=R
Which basically is the longkvist younger Futhark (except that l and m have switched places).
The Gyllental Runes contain three extra runes for the numbers 17-19. These are bindrunor, Runes constructed out of two other runes.
In this font you will find the Gyllental Runes;
1-9 at the 1-9 keys
10 at the A-key,
11 at the S-key,
12 at the &-key (långkvist t, the Rune Alphabet t is a kortkvist t),
13 at the b-key,
14 at the l-key,
15 at the m-key,
16 at the y-key,
17 at the /-key,
18 at the (-key and
19 at the )-key.
40991
Published: 2nd June, 2011
Last edited: 29th May, 2011
Created: 29th May, 2011
HOW TO USE THIS FONT
Most of the runes in the younger Futhark correspond with letters in the Latin alphabet.
Those Runes you write using lowercase keys only. Don't use uppercase keys. Most of them don't work in this font. You will only get a small symbol indicating there is no Rune connected to that key.
There are no Runes corresponding to numbers either.
Some Runes are used for more than one Latin letter in this font.
The b-rune is used for b and p in this font.
The f-rune is used for f and v in this font.
The t-rune is used for t and d in this font.
The s-rune is used for c, s and z in this font. If c have the sound value "k", use k instead.
The k-rune is use for g, k, q and x in this font. "ks" might be better for x.
The u-rune is used for o, u, y and w in this font.
The i-rune is used for i, e and j in this font.
These uppercase keys have Runes connected to them
The T-key will get you the "th"-Rune. This rune also represents the “dt”-sound.
The R-key will get you the "R"-Rune (which is a different Rune than the "r"-Rune). The "R"-rune sometimes also is transcribed as 'z'. The "R"-Rune is generally only used at the end of a word.
In this version of the Futhark there are two runes that represent “a”. The A-key give you one of these, the a-key the other one.
The space-key will give you a dot that sometimes was used between words. The point-key will get you a double dot. This is a clone of longkvistfuTArk
90990
Published: 24th May, 2011
Last edited: 24th May, 2011
Created: 22nd May, 2011
Clone of fuTarkuRnord.
This version of the Futhark (den yngre långkvistiga Futharken [younger longtwig Futhark]) contains 16 letters (Runes).
This Futhark is a simplified version of the elder 24-character Futhark (den urnordiska Futharken or urgermanska Futharken). The younger Futhark was developed between year 500 and 700. It was easier to carve in stone.
There is also another version of the 16-character Futhark better suited for carving in wood, den kortkvistiga Futharken (shorttwiged Futhark). That isn’t part of this font.
Most of the runes in the younger Futhark correspond with letters in the Latin alphabet.
Those Runes you write using lowercase keys only. Don't use uppercase keys. Most of them don't work in this font. You will only get a small symbol indicating there is no Rune connected to that key.
There are no Runes corresponding to numbers either.
Some Runes are used for more than one Latin letter in this font.
The s-rune is used for c, s and z in this font. If c have the sound value "k", use k instead.
The k-rune is use for k, q and x in this font. "ks" might be better for x.
The u-rune is used for u and w in this font.
The i-rune is used for i and j in this font.
Some of the runes can change sound value by adding a dot (stungna runor).
The use of dotted runes is pretty late. It starts somewhere around year 1000. Before that the runes without dots represented more than one sound.
“e” is a dotted i-rune in this font.
“g” is a dotted k-rune in this font.
“d” is a dotted t-rune in this font.
“p” is a dotted b-rune in this font.
“v” is a dotted f-rune in this font.
“y” is a dotted u-rune in this font.
“o” is an u-rune with two dots in this font. This isn’t historically correct. If you want to be as historically correct as possible, use a plain “u”.
These uppercase keys have Runes connected to them
The T-key will get you the "th"-Rune. This rune also represents the “dt”-sound.
The R-key will get you the "R"-Rune (which is a different Rune than the "r"-Rune). The "R"-rune sometimes also is transcribed as 'z'. The "R"-Rune is generally only used at the end of a word.
In this version of the Futhark there are two runes that represent “a”. The A-key give you one of these, the a-key the other one.
The space-key will give you a dot that sometimes was used between words. The point-key will get you a double dot.
This is a clone of fuTarkuRnord
80990
Published: 19th May, 2011
Last edited: 16th May, 2011
Created: 15th May, 2011
This version of the Futhark (den urnordiska Futharken or the Elder Futhark) contains 24 letters (Runes). Most of them correspond with letters in the Latin alphabet.
Those Runes you write using lowercase keys only. Don't use uppercase keys. Most of them don't work in this font. You will only get a small symbol indicating there is no Rune connected to that key.
There are no Runes corresponding to numbers either.
Some Runes are used for more than one Latin letter in this font.
The s-rune is used for c, s and z in this font. If c have the sound value "k", use k instead.
The k-rune is use for k, q and x in this font. "ks" might be better for x.
The w-rune is use for v and W.
In this font is included a y-rune that really don't belong is this version of the Futhark. If you want to be as historically correct as possible, you might want to use the u-rune in stead.
These uppercase keys have Runes connected to them
The E-key will get you the "ë"-Rune (also known as the "ï"-Rune).
The N-key will get you the "ng"-Rune.
The R-key will get you the "R"-Rune (which is a different Rune than the "r"-Rune). The "R"-rune sometimes also is transcribed as 'z'. The "R"-Rune is generally only used at the end of a word.
The T-key will get you the "th"-Rune.
The space-key will give you a dot that sometimes was used between words. The point-key will get you a double dot.