Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 105 Picture: Figure 154
Worm, OleWor1643s. 209-211
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 104 Picture: Figure 150
Worm, OleWor1643s. 218-219
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 106 Picture: Figure 156
Worm, OleWor1643s. 200-202
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 110 Picture: Figure 159
Worm, OleWor1643s. 177-178
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 112 Picture: Figure 162
Worm, OleWor1643s. 178-179
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 114 Picture: Figure 165
Worm, OleWor1643s. 197-200
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 116 Picture: Figure 168
Worm, OleWor1643s. 205-208
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 119 Picture: Figure 172
Worm, OleWor1643s. 183-184
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 122 Picture: Figure 175
Worm, OleWor1643s. 185-187
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 124-125 Picture: Figure 178
Worm, OleWor1643s. 171-175
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 126-127 Picture: Figure 181
Worm, OleWor1643s. 187-197
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 133 Picture: Figure 187
Worm, OleWor1643s. 180-181
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 134 Picture: Figure 189
Worm, OleWor1643s. 181-183
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 136 Picture: Figure 192
Worm, OleWor1643s. 214-218
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 143 Picture: Figure 198
Worm, OleWor1643s. 219-220
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 144 Picture: Figure 202
Worm, OleWor1643s. 169-171
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 146 Picture: Figure 205
Worm, OleWor1643s. 213-214
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 148 Picture: Figure 208
Worm, OleWor1643s. 175-176
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 149 Picture: Figure 210
Worm, OleWor1643s. 211-212
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 150 Picture: Figure 213
Worm, OleWor1643s. 146-162
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 154 Picture: Figure 217
Worm, OleWor1643s. 144-146
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 157 Picture: Figure 220
Worm, OleWor1643s. 212-213
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 158 Picture: Figure 222
Worm, OleWor1643s. 202-204
Moltke, BiblArnSup1-2 I s. 160 Picture: Figure 225
Worm, OleWor1643s. 204-205
Paper. The watermark is a symmetrical shield picturing a man in a loincloth standing in water with a heavy stick in his right hand; his left hand is extended, holding a waving band above his head. On the inserted leaf, fol. 2, the lower part of a watermark is seen: The bottom part of a shield depicting the west front of a church with twin towers.
Foliation 1-25 by Kålund in red ink.
The content consists of texts and illustrations af runic stones, runic monuments and grave slabs. The texts are written in long lines but the number of lines varies according to how much information is provided for each monument. Each page features a text and an illustration with the text placed either above or below the illustration. However, the texts and the illustrations of the runic monuments: Hunnestad Monument 9v-10r, Björketorp Monument 11v-12r and Västra Strö Monument (12v-13r), are laid out with text on the versos and the illustrations on the following rectos.
The illustration of Västra Strö Monument is drawn vertically.
Fol. 3 is blank; fols 1r, 2v, 2bisr, 3r-v, 4v, 5v, 9r, 17v, 18v and 19v are also blank.
Written and drawn by Jonas Skonvig.
The boards were originally covered in parchment from a Missale Scardense; this has now been transferred to Access. 7a α, Hs 1, fol 4-5.
Now the manuscript is bound in a cardboard binding with a marbled paper cover and cloth spine and corners. On the first leaf, pasted to the pastedown it says A. M. 369, fol. — 19 bl. + 2 bis 5/3 11.
Written in Sweden in the summer of 1627.
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.
Catalogued by . The information on the runic inscriptions mainly comes from Danmarks runeindskrifter and the internet database Danske runeindskrifter.