Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 35 Picture: Figure 47
Worm, OleWor1643s. 285-288
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 38 Picture: Figure 51
Worm, OleWor1643s. 288-289
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 43 Picture: Figure 59
Løffler, Løffler1889 s. 20 Picture: plate IX, fig. 48
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 40
Løffler, Løffler1889 s. 20 Picture: plate IX, fig. 47
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 44 Picture: Figure 61
Worm, OleWor1643s. 284-285
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 46 Picture: Figure 65
Worm, OleWor1643s. 283-284
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 48 Picture: Figure 69
Worm, OleWor1643s. 278-279
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 51 Picture: Figure 73
Worm, OleWor1643s. 279-280
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 52 Picture: Figure 75
Worm, OleWor1643s. 290-292
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 55 Picture: Figure 80
Worm, OleWor1643s. 295-296
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 56 Picture: Figure 84
Worm, OleWor1643s. 296-297
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 57 Picture: Figure 86
Worm, OleWor1643s. 297-298
Løffler, Løffler1889 s. 15, 18, 24 Picture: plate XII, fig. 66
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 58 Picture: Figure 89
Worm, OleWor1643s. 292-295
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 59 Picture: Figure 91
Worm, OleWor1643s. 301-302
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 60 Picture: Figure 93
Worm, OleWor1643s. 302-303
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 63 Picture: Figure 97
Worm, OleWor1643s. 303-304
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 64 Billede: Fig. 99 Picture: Figure 99
Worm, OleWor1643s. 317-319
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 66 Picture: Figure 103
Worm, OleWor1643s. 317-319
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 70 Picture: Figure 108
Worm, OleWor1643s. 304-305
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 74 Picture: Figure 113
Worm, OleWor1643s. 311-312
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 75 Picture: Figure 115
Worm, OleWor1643s. 312-313
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 76 Picture: Figure 117
Worm, OleWor1643s. 313-315
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 80 Picture: Figure 122
Worm, OleWor1643s. 323-324
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 83 Picture: Figure 126
Worm, OleWor1643s. 325
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 84 Picture: Figure 129
Worm, OleWor1643s. 341-344
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 88-89 Picture: Figure 134
Worm, OleWor1643s. 326-338
Molkte, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 98 Picture: Figure 144
Worm, OleWor1643s. 338-341
Paper.. The watermark is a sheild with a crown and a Basel Crozier. Beneath, the capital letters "V A" are found.
The written pages are foliated 1-18 in red ink.
The content consists of texts and illustrations of runic stones and grave slabs. It is written in long lines but the number of lines varies according to how much information is written for each monument. The layout also varies considerably in this manuscript. Both a single illustration with text and two different illustrations with texts on one page are found. The position of text varies too; thus we find text above, under, right and left of the illustrations. On the inserted leaves, fols 3-4, the text is found on 3r and the illustrations are found on 3v and 4r. Fols 1, 8, 12 together with the last 3 leaves are blank. Fols 1v, 2v, 5v, 11v, 16r + 18v are also blank.
Written and drawn by Jonas Skonvig.
The inserted leaves, fols 3-4, are written in another hand.
Pictures of rune stones and gravestones:
Grensten stone
Gravestone Laid over Asser in Ejsing Church
Ådum Stone
Horne Stone
Øster Løgum Stone
Jelling Stone 2
Jelling Stone 1
The binding was originally bound in a parchment cover taken from a Missale Scardense; now it has been transferred to Access. 7a α, Hs 1.
Now the manuscript is bound in a cardboard binding with a marbled paper cover with canvas spine and corners. On the first page, pasted to the front board, is written: A. M. 367, fol. — Overført: 18 bl. 17/5 86
Written in Denmark in c. 1629.
The illlustrated pamphlets of notes, AM 366-371 fol. forms part of a larger corpus commonly referred to as Præsteindberetninger til Ole Worm (‘Priests’ Reports submitted to Ole Worm’). In the seventeenth century the doctor, scholar of antiquities and polymath Worm collected curiosities for his private collection of antiquities, Museum Wormianum, while simultaneously pursuing an interest in prehistoric Denmark, and in particular runic inscriptions. To this end, on 11. ágúst 1622, Worm sent a missive to every bishop in Denmark requesting that they instruct their rectors to investigate ancient monuments found in their parishes, and primarily objects featuring runic inscriptions. Worm then used these handwritten reports as the basis of his printed book, Monumenta Danica from 1643, a work which laid the foundations of runic research in Denmark.
What links AM 366-371 fol. together is that they contain some of the earliest written accounts of runic inscriptions and petroglyphs in the former Danish kingdom, which at that time encompassed Skåne, Halland and Blekinge in present-day Sweden, Norway, including Bohuslän (which at that time was part of Norway) as well as Iceland and the Faroe Islands.