Tiwaz rune
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The t-rune ᛏ is named after Tyr, and was identified with this god. The reconscructed Proto-Germanic name is Tîwaz. The rune is sometimes also referred to as Teiwaz, or spelling variants.
Comparisons
The rune was also compared with Mars as in the Icelandic rune poem:
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In the Anglo-Saxon rune poem however, the same rune is identified with polaris:
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The charm (alu) on the Lindholm amulet, dated 2nd to 4th century
- aaaaaaaazzznnn?bmuttt contains three consecutive t runes, interpreted as an invocation of Tyr.
Fascist use
As with other runes, the Tyr rune has been used as a fascist symbol by National Socialists. It was the badge of the Sturmabteilung training schools, the Reichsführerschulen in Nazi Germany. In Neo-Nazism it has appeared, together with the Sol rune, in the emblem of the Kassel based think tank Thule Seminar and, possibly based on this, in the previous logo of the unpolitical fashion label Thor Steinar (incorrectly, it might be added, since both Thor and Thule would be spelled with a thorn) rune.Neopagan use
The Tyr rune is also used by adherents of Asatru or Heathenry with reference to ancestral implications of the symbol, in general free of political symbolism.Divination
In modern systems of runic divination, the Tyr rune symbolizes "warrior spirit", and qualities like truth, justice, duty, discipline, responsibility, etc. (Northern Mysteries & Magick by Freya Aswynn)
| Runes |
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| Elder Fuþark: ᚠ f | ᚢ u | ᚦ þ | ᚨ a | ᚱ r | ᚲ k | ᚷ g | ᚹ w | ᚺ h | ᚾ n | ᛁ i | ᛃ j |ᛇ ï | ᛈ p | ᛉ z | ᛊ s |ᛏ t | ᛒ b | ᛖ e | ᛗ m | ᛚ l | ᛜ ŋ | ᛞ d | ᛟ o |
| Futhorc | Younger Futhark | Rune poems | Runestones | Runology |
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