THE RUNE: INGWAR / INGWAZ / ING

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Variation on IngwaR.

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Name: IngwaR, Ingwaz, Ing
Aettir: Tyr
Sound value: /ng/
Usually associated with: Freyr.
Symbolises: Freyr the god of fertility (Ing).

Basic meaning:
IngwaR is named after its meaning IngwaR which means God, in this case God of fertility, Ing is also one of the fertility deity Freyr’s names.

The structure of the rune:
IngwaR has no main staff and is made up of four bi-staffs in the shape of a diamond, as the rune has no main staff the rune floats in the centre of the runic inscription and is slightly smaller than other runes with a main staff.
IngwaR can also be twisted so that the rune has a square shape.

The sound value of the rune:
In the Proto-Norse Futhark, IngwaR has the sound value /ng/.

Rune Poems

The three rune poems.
The names and symbolism of the runes are based mainly on three poems, which are the Old Icelandic, the Old Norwegian and the Anglo-Saxon. The Old Icelandic and Old Norwegian rune poems contain only 16 poems because they belong to the Younger Futhark, while the Anglo-Saxon rune poem contains 29 poems because the Anglo-Saxon/Frisian rune line futhorc contains 29 runes. The Anglo-Saxon rune poems have then been combined with the proto-norse runes that lack Old Icelandic and Old Norwegian rune poems, which is not at all wrong because the Anglo-Saxon futhorc also has the eight runes that lack old nordic poems.

Swedish runic poems.
There is also something called the Swedish rune poems, these arise in connection with rune staves (prim staves rune calendars,), rune staves have been found from the 12th century but the use of rune staves is known from the 5th century.

We have also chosen to include the Swedish rune poems, which are 14 verses, each of which contains only one line.
These were transcribed by the runologist Johannes Bureus in the 16th century from a rune staff believed to be from the same period. We have taken a more normalised text made by Arend Quak in 1987.
Under the poem marked with ‘-’ there are representations of meanings and symbols of agricultural life. These meanings and signs are taken from when they were recorded by the early modern researcher Georg Stiernhielm.

The different interpretations, meanings and symbolisms of runes.
You can find all sorts of interpretations and meanings of runes in books and online, all these interpretations, meanings, symbolisms and assumptions are usually based on what the author himself has interpreted the meaning of each rune, based on any or all of the three poems. But each rune has only one basic meaning, which is what the rune name means.

Swedish:
There is no rune poem

Old Icelandic:
There is no rune poem

Old Norwegian:
There is no rune poem

Anglo-Saxon:
Ing wæs ærest mid East-Denum
gesewen secgun, oþ he siððan est
ofer wæg gewat; wæn æfter ran;
ðus Heardingas ðone hæle nemdun.