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The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt [c] is a 2015 action role-playing game developed and published by the Polish studio CD Projekt.It is the sequel to the 2011 game The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings and the third game in The Witcher video game series, played in an open world with a third-person perspective.
Gameplay does not differ much from the base game apart from a different story and exclusive quests. The expansion contains several new weapons and items, for example, the Runewright system, where Ofieri craftsmen offer Runes (upgrades for weapons and armor) to the player in exchange for money.
This runestone, listed as U 13 in Rundata, crowns the barrow of Björn Ironside in Uppland, Sweden. The stone is a fragment; broken pieces of the stone lie next to it. The stone is a fragment; broken pieces of the stone lie next to it.
Runestone U 871 with several runic animals pictured on the same rock (runic dragons in red, runic serpent in white), which are bound together. Runic animals ( Swedish : rundjur ) are the decorative animal figures on runic inscriptions , especially on runestones , which belong to Germanic animal ornamentation [ sv ] and the like.
The origin of the Rundata project was a 1986 database of Swedish inscriptions at Uppsala University for use in the Scandinavian Languages Department. [2] At an international runic seminar in 1990, it was proposed to expand the database to cover all Nordic runic inscriptions, but funding for the project was not available until a grant was received in 1992 from the Axel och Margaret Ax:son ...
Runestone Gs 13 in church in Gävle. Gästrikland Runic Inscription 13 or Gs 13 is a runestone carved on red sandstone located in a church in Gävle, Gästrikland. It was carved in the 11th century by the runemaster Åsmund Kåresson. [1] The place name Tafeistaland (modern Swedish: Tavastland) in the inscription refers to a geographical region ...
Anglo-Saxon runes or Anglo-Frisian runes are runes that were used by the Anglo-Saxons and Medieval Frisians (collectively called Anglo-Frisians) as an alphabet in their native writing system, recording both Old English and Old Frisian (Old English: rūna, ᚱᚢᚾᚪ, "rune").
Runic alphabets were added to the Unicode Standard in September, 1999 with the release of version 3.0. The Unicode block for Runic alphabets is U+16A0–U+16FF. It is intended to encode the letters of the Elder Futhark , the Anglo-Frisian runes , and the Younger Futhark long-branch and short-twig (but not the staveless) variants, in cases where ...