Elder Futhark Runes
Twenty-four ancestral runes of the Elder Futhark — the oldest written form of the Germanic peoples. Cast one for the day, lay three for the Norns (Urd · Verdandi · Skuld), or open a five-point cross for a wider question. Each rune has its keyword, upright and reversed meaning, and a deeper interpretation.
Four spreads
Daily for one rune. Norns Three Fates for past·present·future. Three Rune Path for the practical reading of a current situation (root, pressure, counsel). Five Point Cross for a wider question (centre, root memory, shadow task, ally, next gate).
Trilingual content
All 24 runes have full content in EN/RU/DE: keyword, upright meaning, reversed meaning (when applicable), and a deeper interpretation. Plus deep readings exploring love, career, shadow per rune on individual pages.
Honest origins
The Elder Futhark is the oldest documented runic script (~150-800 CE). Used for inscription, divination, and protection across the early Germanic world. Treated here as a symbolic instrument, not a magical one — they describe quality of the moment, not its outcome.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are reversed runes always negative?
No. Reversed positions name where the natural quality of a rune is blocked, exaggerated, or being avoided — they are diagnostic, not punitive. Some runes (Gebo, Hagalaz, Isa) have no reversed form at all.
What is the Norns spread?
Three runes named after the three Norns of Norse cosmology: Urd (the well of what was), Verdandi (what is becoming), Skuld (what shall be). A classical past-present-future frame in a Norse mythological skin.