131 notes
-
dethound liked this
-
chairfacechippendale liked this
-
szcz liked this
-
akcrooks liked this
-
paperdungeon liked this
-
hererestriction liked this
-
burgerrr liked this
-
citrusskies reblogged this from fuckyeahvikingsandcelts
-
mxschwmmr liked this
-
jeremylawson reblogged this from buzzkillyou and added:
This thing has always fascinated me. I’m still on the fence on about it’s authenticity. But I want to believe it’s real.
-
mymindmyworldmyrules reblogged this from zakariusodinson
-
mymindmyworldmyrules answered:
Very real. It was found in roots of a tree when they were clearing land to farm.
-
drldeboer answered:
Still investigating. Unfortunately leaning toward hoax, however. Language & dating do not match.
-
zakariusodinson reblogged this from fuckyeahvikingsandcelts
-
ealdleoht reblogged this from fuckyeahvikingsandcelts
-
paulohcorrrea answered:
music
-
ralfmaximus answered:
Hoax, alas. The engraved language utilizes modern (post 14th century) verb forms and the “wrong” numerals for the supposed era.
-
buzzkillyou reblogged this from fuckyeahvikingsandcelts
-
stroppygirl answered:
Minnesota…it’s a little far inland for Vikings. Also not much to pillage there in the past.
-
This was featured in #History
-
ljspillowbook reblogged this from fuckyeahvikingsandcelts
-
steampunk-micki answered:
It’s probably real, I read a lot about rune stones and this is the most famous rune stone outside Scandinavia that is considered real. :)
-
fuckyeahvikingsandcelts posted this