ᚹᚨᛚᚺᚨᚲᚢᚱᚾᛖ
Appearance
Proto-Norse
[edit]Etymology
[edit]*ᚹᚨᛚᚺᚨᛉ (*walhaʀ, “Gaul, Roman; southern foreigner”) + *ᚲᛟᚱᚾᚨ (*korna, “grain”).
Noun
[edit]ᚹᚨᛚᚺᚨᚲᚢᚱᚾᛖ (walhakurne /walhakurnē/) n (dative singular)
- (poetic, kenning) gold
- 450-500, Tjurkö 1 bracteate
- ᚹᚢᚱᛏᛖᚱᚢᚾᛟᛉᚨᚾᚹᚨᛚᚺᚨᚲᚢᚱᚾᛖ··ᚺᛖᛚᛞᚨᛉᚲᚢᚾᛁᛗᚢᛞᛁᚢ···
wurterunozanwalhakurne··heldazkunimudiu···- wurtē runōz an walhakurnē, Heldaz Kunimundiu
- Heldaz wrought the runes on the Welsh grain for Kunimunduz.
- 450-500, Tjurkö 1 bracteate
Usage notes
[edit]- This word is a kenning, a poetic circumlocution commonly employed in early Germanic poetry. The "Roman grain" refers to gold, the material of which the bracteate bearing the inscription was made. Specifically, it may refer to the Germanic melting of Roman solidi and aurei coins. Compare Old Norse gold-kenning vala malmr (“Welsh ore”), and the Old High German phrase cheisuringu gitan ‘made of the Emperor's coins’, referring to an arm-ring.