Rune School Logo - Visit us to Learn about the Viking/Saxon Runes
[Ansuz (Os) Guardian rune]


Courses

[Dagaz (Daeg) Guardian rune]
[Back to Rune School Home Page][Back to Main Lessons Page]

Meanings

Introduction

This lecture is very different from some of the others. Normally we try to give you a fairly comprehensive introduction to whichever topic is under consideration. This lecture though is very much only a starting point and leaves you with considerable work still to do. We are not giving you the rune meanings in this lecture, what we are offering are some key words to help you get a feel for the rune. We have chosen to keep the information provided concise precisely because it should act only as a sign post. Memorizing it is not the way to learning the runes.

If we gave you a full detailed list of meanings at this stage, the chances are you would treat them like wisdom handed down from on-high and hence you would never end up reading the runes, you would just be parroting back this lecture.

Understanding the Runes

Reading the runes requires more than an academic book-learnt list of their meanings. Firstly it requires an understanding of the society they evolved out of. Secondly you need a personal understanding. You must feel what the runes mean. Any true reader of the runes must achieve an individual appreciation of what they represent rather than taking meanings from a book. You have no right as a rune reader to tell others what the runes mean for them unless you have first grasped what they mean to you.

The runes had an immediacy for the ancient runemasters which unless we are very careful they can easily lack today. The rune glyphs were not abstract designs, they were pictures of things which had particular significance to the culture of the day. The need fire, the cart's wheel, the tribal banner - all these mattered in the lives of the runemaster and the world they belonged to. In order to be successful as a rune reader you need to discover meanings that have a similar relevance to your own life.

You have certainly never been out hunting Aurochs, so what understanding can you really have of the Uruz (Ur) rune? Maybe though you can think of some other rite of passage or initiation you have undergone. Perhaps you can recall some other occasion on which your courage was tested. It is these kind of personal experiences and memories that can bring you closer to an appreciation of the rune. Some runes are of course easier to feel/relate to for a modern rune reader than others but you should ultimately be able to develop an appreciation of them all. For example, though we no longer use cattle as currency, anyone who has faced bankruptcy or experienced a period of poverty in their life will be able to grasp the message of Fehu (Feoh) and understand what an insubstantial transitory thing material wealth can be.

In the following table we give positive and negative meanings of each rune, along with the figure regarded as presiding over that rune. As with much about the runes governing deities are the subject of much debate so don't be surprised if we soon send you off to look at material which contradicts what we have said. It's all part of the joy of learning the runes and in the end you have to come to your own decisions about these matters. We won't be looking at the idea of reversed runes until Lesson 17 and if at that stage you decide to use them you will find the reversed meanings equate roughly to the negative ones given in our table. We have however given negative meanings for runes that some authors will tell you are "positive" and don't reverse. The negative meaning though is always there in the same way that light generates shadow - a shadow which is intimately connected to and dependent on the light. A rune that bestows wealth is in simplistic terms "good" but if as a consequence of becoming richer we become selfish, don't share our good fortune or stop thinking of others then it is "bad". The runes therefore warn us to maintain equilibrium regardless of what events good or bad befall us.

 

RUNE MEANING (Key words only)
[Fehu (Feoh) rune

Positive: gain, financial security, success, fertility, nourishment, food, sharing, luxury

Negative: loss, jealousy, envy, greed, failure, bankruptcy, payment, slavery

Presiding Figure: The god Frey

[Uruz (Ur) rune]

Positive: bravery, questing, initiation, challenge, untamable spirit, rugged good health, masculinity, stamina, independence, strength, action

Negative: male violence, callousness, inaction, abuse, poor health, anger/rage

Presiding Figure: None

[Thurisaz (Thorn) rune]

Positive: protection and defense, fertility and regeneration, survival of difficulties, need for correction action or right decision, resistance

Negative: vulnerability, conflict, strife, disease, many problems, natural forces, destruction, aggression, malice, change without warning, attack

Presiding Figure: The god Thor

[Ansuz (Os) rune]

Positive: news, study, communication, wisdom perhaps from unlikely source, speech, inspiration, thought, shamanism, language and writing skills, leadership, teaching, truth

Negative: loss, misunderstandings, vanity, dishonesty, treachery, neurosis

Presiding Figure: The god Odin

[Raido (Rad) rune]

Positive: travel, exploration, vacation, new start, motion, taking control, leadership, direction, rites, ceremonies, process, promotion

Negative: control freaks, dictatorship, disruption, demotion

Presiding Figure: None

[Kenaz (Cen) rune]

Positive: enlightenment, intellectual learning, moulding, shaping, clarity, knowledge, revelation

Negative: confusion, false hope, lack of clarity, arrogance, ignorance

Presiding Figure: None

[Gebo (Gyfu) rune]

Positive: love, partnership, sharing, gifts, balance, exchange, union

Negative: sacrifice, dishonesty, lack of balance, toll

Presiding Figure: None

[Wunjo (Wynn) rune]

Positive: fulfillment, success, glory, respect, solidarity, hope, wishes, fellowship, harmony, delight, well-being

Negative: failure, misery, exile, loneliness, intoxication, excessive zeal

Presiding Figure: None

[Hagalaz (Haegl) rune]

Positive: cleansing, purging, room for growth, acceptance, fortitude, past events, letting go, unconscious mind, testing

Negative: destructive natural force, chaos and disruption, loss, need for shelter, unresolved matters, blaming others, nostalgia

Presiding Figure: The Norn Urd

[Naudhiz (Nyd) rune]

Positive: inner strength, resources, heroism, urgency, growth, change, determination, resistance, resilience

Negative: suffering, affliction, necessity, distress, guilt, anxiety, cowardice, constraints, extremes

Presiding Figure: The Norn Verdandi

[Isa (Is) rune]

Positive: slowing, pause for thought, preservation, stability, focus, detachment, completion

Negative: cooling of relationships, deceptive beauty, treachery, dangerous path, restrictions, delay

Presiding Figure: The Norn Skuld

[Jera (Ger) rune]

Positive: a year, cycles, passing of time, plenty, fruition, growth, progress, patience

Negative: paying price for deeds, repetition of negative patterns

Presiding Figure: None

[Eihwaz (Eoh) rune]

Positive: endurance, initiation, change, consciousness, defense, spirituality, strength, reliability, rebirth

Negative: death, loss, confusion, hysteria

Presiding Figure: None

[Pertho (Peorth) rune]

Positive: Wyrd, amusement, gaming, success, birth/rebirth, memory, problem solving, occult knowledge

Negative: delusion, fantasies, failure, that which is hidden, powers beyond human influence

Presiding Figure: None

[Algiz (Eohl) rune]

Positive: protection, defense, repelling evil, shield, support

Negative: vulnerability, danger, forbidden acts

Presiding Figure: None

[Sowelu (Sigil) rune]

Positive: good health, success, life-giving force, energy, clarity, understanding, optimism, confidence

Negative: sudden change sweeping things out of way, over-confidence, burn out

Presiding Figure: The god Baldur

[Tiwaz (Tir) rune]

Positive: law, order, justice, bravery, honesty, victory

Negative: war, defeat, paying price for deeds, sacrifice, dishonesty

Presiding Figure: The god Tyr

[Berkana (Beorc) rune]

Positive: fertility, woman, love, birth, reproduction, growth, healing, recooperation, rejuvenation, children, new beginnings

Negative: secrecy, containment, immaturity, lust, abandonment

Presiding Figure: None

[Ehwaz (Eh) rune]

Positive: partnership, union, marriage, instinct, progress, trust, loyalty, faith

Negative: treachery, break up of partnerships, lack of direction, reckless haste

Presiding Figure: None

[Mannaz (Man) rune]

Positive: mankind, development of consciousness, intelligence, reason, social structure, rational mind, support, awareness, openmindedness

Negative: arrogance, bigotry

Presiding Figure: The god Heimdall

[Lagaz (Lagu) rune]

Positive: intuition, occult, flow, healing, mystery, empathy, emotion, unconscious mind, adaptability, dreams

Negative: emotional manipulation, madness, despair, suicide, lack of flexibility, moods

Presiding Figure: None

[Ingwaz (Ing) rune]

Positive: sexuality, fertility, agriculture, peace, plenty, children, virtue, common sense

Negative: lust, immaturity

Presiding Figure: The god Frey

[Dagaz (Daeg) rune]

Positive: daylight, illumination, break through, transformation, enlightenment, start of new cycle, health, prosperity, balance, a state of being between things

Negative: impulsiveness, ending

Presiding Figure: None

[Othala (Ethel) rune]

Positive: family, heritage, clan, home, nation, inheritance, patriotism, natural law

Negative: racism, greed, xenophobia, provincialism

Presiding Figure: None


You have completed the lesson. Read it as many times as you need to in order to feel you understand it. Then return here for:
Lesson 8 - Comprehension Tests, Reading and Further Exercises

Please ensure you complete these exercises before moving on to the next lesson.

Free web translationsFree web translationsFree web translations
Translate Page
Press Button To See a Printer Friendly Version of Page