Seeking Runes in Myth & History (Live in New Mexico)

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Modern ideas and misconceptions about runes and their supposed magic properties distract from the biggest mysteries and most fascinating facts about them. An invited talk given March 7, 2023 for the Religious Studies Program at the University of New Mexico (religious-stud....
    Jackson Crawford, Ph.D.: Sharing real expertise in Norse language and myth with people hungry to learn, free of both ivory tower elitism and the agendas of self-appointed gurus. Visit jacksonwcrawfo... (includes bio and linked list of all videos).
    Jackson Crawford’s Patreon page: / norsebysw
    Visit Grimfrost at glnk.io/6q1z/j...
    Latest FAQs: vimeo.com/3751... (updated Nov. 2019).
    Jackson Crawford’s translation of Hávamál, with complete Old Norse text: www.hackettpub... or www.amazon.com...
    Jackson Crawford’s translation of The Poetic Edda: www.hackettpub... or www.amazon.com...
    Audiobook: www.audible.co...
    Jackson Crawford’s translation of The Saga of the Volsungs: www.hackettpub... or www.amazon.com...
    Audiobook: www.audible.co...
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Комментарии • 70

  • @mrjones2721
    @mrjones2721 Год назад +82

    “This is my least favorite thing I’ve seen apart from violence committed in front of my face.” As someone who likes a lot of historical things that have been New Aged, I felt that.

  • @ragnarosthefirelord8662
    @ragnarosthefirelord8662 Год назад +25

    Jackson making a Pepe Silvia reference made my day. I appreciate how you don't take yourself too seriously while presenting real scholarship.

  • @BarbaricYawp
    @BarbaricYawp Год назад +28

    Being a Tolkien nerd I can't help but think of Gandalf outside the Doors of Durin. Befuddled by his own cleverness, trying to invoke magic, instead of just saying friend.

  • @PRKLGaming
    @PRKLGaming Год назад +3

    You're actually the first result that comes out on a logged out RUclips when I search for "runes"

  • @ulfrtheviking
    @ulfrtheviking Год назад +40

    This is where I live!! Oh man I totally would've showed up to ask you to sign my Edda..

    • @beepboop204
      @beepboop204 Год назад +3

      🙃

    • @JenksAnro
      @JenksAnro Год назад +5

      Hope that's not a euphemism idk if he does that sort of thing

    • @beepboop204
      @beepboop204 Год назад +3

      @@JenksAnro is your Edda more prose, or more poesy, ifyouknowwhatimsayin

    • @ulfrtheviking
      @ulfrtheviking Год назад +8

      Yall freaks lmao. I have a copy of his translation of The Poetic Edda 🤣🤣

    • @JenksAnro
      @JenksAnro Год назад +1

      ​@@beepboop204 idk, which one is shorter?

  • @peterciszewski1034
    @peterciszewski1034 Год назад +3

    An idea why "spelling out the alphabet" may have been done so often: in software engineering, computers will often exchange information about the protocol and its version before they start to communicate information using that protocol. Perhaps "writing out the alphabet" was done in the past to let the reader know which "version" of the writing system the author was using in their work?

  • @jesseholcombe3347
    @jesseholcombe3347 Год назад +11

    Very glad I got to see this in person.

  • @fredblonder7850
    @fredblonder7850 Год назад +7

    Regarding your comment about finding runes on objects, labelling those objects withtheir names (spear, rock, &c.), I think this makes perfect sense. When we tech children to read, we use picture books where the objects in the pctures are labelled withtheir names, so the child can read the name and see it applied to the object. The Norse didn’t have inexpensive paper books, so it would be simpler to label actual objects with their names, as a means of teaching someone the runes.

  • @astridhaze9627
    @astridhaze9627 Год назад +10

    Time and time again you provide such quality work that helps me to better understand topics I struggle to get accurate information on. Thank you for your research and dedication to these topics. You, sir, are a gem. Till the next video, saying thank you from humid Louisiana!

  • @22Fooolish
    @22Fooolish Год назад +5

    Dr. Crawford is a badass

  • @theangryginger7582
    @theangryginger7582 Год назад +5

    It seems like his classes must've been quite fun

  • @Henrique-wy6cv
    @Henrique-wy6cv Год назад +10

    Runes are indeed a fascinating subject, hope someday we can have more findings about them!
    Oh, and that SW reference at the end was brilliant lol!

    • @weepingscorpion8739
      @weepingscorpion8739 Год назад

      2023 is already shaping up to be a historic year in runology. So we do have interesting times ahead.

  • @garrettbates2639
    @garrettbates2639 Год назад +2

    Oh man, I would have totally made the hour and a half commute for this.

  • @gamejenk8206
    @gamejenk8206 Год назад +6

    Thanks Dr Crawford, you make learning super fun and easy. I have trouble reading books so I got your audiobooks and watch your channel and it is freaking awesome!

  • @cloud819
    @cloud819 Год назад +1

    Thanks for visiting our state. Come back anytime.

  • @mrjones2721
    @mrjones2721 Год назад +7

    Regarding alu, presumably scholars have already looked for phrases that started with A-L-U? That’s where my mind immediately went. Medieval scribes routinely reduced common phrases to abbreviations, so it would make sense that people writing on surfaces more difficult to write on than parchment would abbreviate, especially when the phrase is incantatory.
    Or maybe they just really liked beer.

    • @knightl3y
      @knightl3y Год назад +1

      I am more biased towards "alu" being beer as in Estonian beer is "õlu" which is close enough to think that Estonian word might have evolved from "alu", but its just a theory - a rune theory! (albeit without any evidence)

  • @eliastandel
    @eliastandel Год назад +3

    36:28 obviously the writer's cat just walked over his keyboard. Mistery solved.

  • @adammiller4122
    @adammiller4122 Год назад +3

    Thank you for uploading this Dr. Crawford.

  • @ChrisRyot
    @ChrisRyot Год назад +1

    Now that I have graduated a couple of years ago already, it's so nice to just listen to lectures without any pressure of studying for an exam, vigorously collecting credit points or following the entire tiresome catalogue of university torture.

  • @LadyValkyri
    @LadyValkyri Год назад +1

    Interesting, entertaining, informative, and wonderful! Thank you! Hugs

  • @ziasurvivor3526
    @ziasurvivor3526 Год назад +1

    Wish I would have known. Would have been there. Hopefully next time.

  • @cloudninetherapeutics7787
    @cloudninetherapeutics7787 Год назад +2

    Bringing some of that chilly Colorado weather with you to New Mexico. Hope you had a good time while you were here. Thanks for the video on the runes, loved it.

  • @DevsQuillsandCartoons
    @DevsQuillsandCartoons Месяц назад

    I was pleasantly surprised by the amount of references you made to runes being used for magic as they are mentioned in the literature. But, I guess I shouldn’t be, given that your main focus is language and by extension literature. Overall, a very fascinating lecture.

  • @denntombstone7004
    @denntombstone7004 Год назад +1

    You are a huge inspiration on my studies keep doing god's work brother

  • @oneukum
    @oneukum Год назад +3

    Greek letters could be used for numbers. The comb with the alu looks suspiciously like a receipt or a bill for beer signed by a literate witness.

  • @njordmannen
    @njordmannen Год назад +2

    Im going to start making runes on bones that just say ale. 😂😂😂 great video Dr. Crawford!

  • @ludviglidstrom6924
    @ludviglidstrom6924 Год назад +2

    I've managed to memorize all of Völuspá in Swedish - Erik Brate's translation from 1906 (I think), so it's quite old-fashioned Swedish but very different from Old Norse or Icelandic. I very much prefer it to Hávamál; one of my favourite parts is the insane list of dwarves that just goes on forever - a lot of those names appear in Tolkien. So I am much more fond of Völuspá than Hávamál - it's also much shorter, even though it still takes me about 25 minutes to recite... I don't really understand people who prefer Hávamál to Völuspá, or any other song in the Poetic Edda to it; for me Völuspá is by far the best song.

  • @Xandara
    @Xandara Год назад

    Fascinating lecture. Thank you!

  • @Mr.Patrick_Hung
    @Mr.Patrick_Hung Год назад +2

    Were there any good questions asked after the talk? If so we might like to hear them.

  • @impunk13
    @impunk13 Год назад +1

    Well done

  • @stumccabe
    @stumccabe Год назад

    Excellent talk - very interesting.

  • @DazaiTakeyama
    @DazaiTakeyama Год назад +2

    Love your work ♤♡♤

  • @anotherelvis
    @anotherelvis Год назад

    Great talk

  • @bobjohnson4897
    @bobjohnson4897 Год назад +1

    this some bangin spanish hip hop!

  • @CaptainBohnenbrot
    @CaptainBohnenbrot Год назад +8

    Could it be that the rune alphabet was reordered (compared to other alphabets of the time) as a simple mnemonic device. The word "Futhark" itself shows that the first 6 runes were pronouncable as one word, hence easy to remember. The greeks for example wouldn't care about that, since their letters had names that just forced them to remember the alphabet completely. (As far as I know we have no reason to assume runes had names as early as the earliest found Futhark alphabets.)
    That was the theory of a layman, there are already more than enough of those on the internet, so sorry for that.

    • @weepingscorpion8739
      @weepingscorpion8739 Год назад +3

      I believe Dr. Crawford has mentioned this hypothesis in one of his videos but we don't have any evidence of this. So there's no either full or partial mnemonic phrase which would explain this order that we know of.

  • @ulrikschackmeyer848
    @ulrikschackmeyer848 Год назад

    About the vimose comb: 'harja', might it be considered the naming of af comb (toothed element dragged through or over something) coming from the farming tool a 'harrow' for tilling the ploughed field, 'harve' in modern Danish, 'Harja' in moderen Swedish? Just a thought.

  • @lauraisabella2513
    @lauraisabella2513 Год назад

    Hi Jackson! Are you doing any presentations like this one at CU any time soon? I’d love to attend one of your presentations.

  • @mindyschaper
    @mindyschaper Год назад

    Runic yoga. How entertaining.

  • @eepeep7571
    @eepeep7571 Год назад

    Could you please do a video on the eggja stone.

  • @stocktonjoans
    @stocktonjoans Год назад

    The fact that different alphabets from around the world have some similar looking characters may mean something, or it could just be due to the fact that there are only so many ways you can make pictograms out of lines before they all start to look the same

  • @wanhaliitto
    @wanhaliitto Год назад

    Harja still means comb in contemporary Finnish.

  • @rohasfin
    @rohasfin 10 месяцев назад

    Check it out, Crawford's going John Wick on fluff-atru, and he'd even dressed the part.

  • @jasperowens
    @jasperowens Год назад +3

    Every new age wicca yoga goofball needs to see this. They probably still wouldn't understand.

  • @HessianLikeTheFabric
    @HessianLikeTheFabric Год назад

    I like the comically squat water bottle

  • @AnnBehemoth
    @AnnBehemoth Год назад

    😍

  • @VanaheimrUllr
    @VanaheimrUllr Год назад

    28:15 where do I find this?! Thorr viki dik!

  • @terhitormanen
    @terhitormanen Год назад

    The word "harja" in Finnish means a brush...

  • @zacharytan3912
    @zacharytan3912 Год назад

    Is relating "erilaz" to modern "earl" not widely accepted?

  • @YolayOle
    @YolayOle Год назад

    Dinkquistics - the study of how dual income, no kids couples communicate in the modern world.

  • @beepboop204
    @beepboop204 Год назад

    😛

  • @KissSlowlyLoveDeeply-pm2je
    @KissSlowlyLoveDeeply-pm2je Год назад

    I respect Jackson, but he spends way too much time whining about what others are doing. He doesn't own the rune topic. People are free to use them for whatever they want.

    • @leocomerford
      @leocomerford Год назад +12

      If people were being clear and up-front about the fact that their rune-uses were just stuff they'd made up themselves, or riffs on ideas about runes that date to the 16th-19th centuries at the earliest, that would be one thing. But they won't do that because, as we all know, by and large the only reason anyone cares about someone's modern rune interpretation or rune-magic is because of the suggestion that it has or might have a connection to beliefs and practices in the ancient or early medieval world.

    • @ThePykeSpy
      @ThePykeSpy Год назад

      If I were an expert in a field confronted with an infinite amount of quacks that keep regurgitating the same pseudo-scientific, unhistorical diarrhea (and who probably get on my case for telling them that), then I'd start "whining" too.
      People can do and believe whatever they want, but as long as weirdos on the internet make money off of shilling literal non-sense to the unsuspecting, it needs people like Dr. Crawford to "whine".

    • @mrjones2721
      @mrjones2721 Год назад +9

      @@leocomerford This. People have been misled into thinking modern rune magic is authentic Viking practice, and there's so much garbage out there that it's hard to get a signal through the noise.
      Plus it's a lecture on modern misconceptions about runes. THE TOPIC IS WHAT MODERN PEOPLE GET WRONG. It's not "whining," it's the topic of the lecture.

    • @KissSlowlyLoveDeeply-pm2je
      @KissSlowlyLoveDeeply-pm2je Год назад

      @@VeritasEtAequitas Who decides what is a wrong use? Why are you gatekeeping this knowledge? Should we only listen to academics about this?

    • @ThePykeSpy
      @ThePykeSpy Год назад +4

      @@KissSlowlyLoveDeeply-pm2je If your choices of authority are "I've studied this topic scientifically for decades" academics and "It came to me in a dream" gurus... yes, listen to the academics.