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THE PIRAEUS
LION

Entrance to the Arsenal , Venice
Steel engraving, published c. 1880

The runic inscription on the sitting lion from
Piraeus
From C[arl] C[hristian] Rafn, Antiquités de
l'Orient. monuments runographiques,
published by la Société royale des antiquaires du Nord,
Copenhagen, 1856
In Semele, Mereweather gives Rafn’s
interpretation of the runes: "I read in a Vienna
journal, that a certain Professor E. E. Rafn of
that city [C. C. Rafn of Copenhagen] has managed
to decipher these mysterious characters, which
he considers, from the proper names, to be a
language used by the Varangian adventurers. He
translates them thus: ‘Hakon, unitedly with Ulf,
Asmund, and Oern, conquered this port. These
men, and Harold the Great (or Tall), on account
of the insurrection of the Greek people, imposed
upon the inhabitants heavy pecuniary fines. Daik
[Dalk] remained a prisoner in remote regions;
Egil and Raguar [Ragnar] were detained under
surveillance [in campaign] in Rumenia . . . and
Armenia. . . . Asmund engraved these runes
unitedly with Asgeir, Thorleif, Thord, and Ivar,
at the request of Harold the Great, although the
Greeks, when they come to think of it, forbid
it.’" (Semele, p. 67, footnote)
Other scholars, e.g. Erik Brate in 1913, have
put forward their interpretations of the
inscription, but there is no consensus as to its
meaning. The runes are barely visible today.
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