In the 17th century,
Hermeticist and
Rosicrucian Johannes Bureus, having been inspired by visions, developed a Runic system based on the
Kaballah and the Futhark which he called the
Adulruna. The
Armanen runes "revealed" to
Guido von List in 1902 were employed for magical purposes in
Germanic mysticism by authors such as
Friedrich Bernhard Marby and
Siegfried Adolf Kummer, and after
World War II in a reformed "pansophical" system by
Karl Spiesberger. More recently,
Stephen Flowers,
Adolf Schleipfer,
Larry E. Camp and others also build on List's system. Several modern systems of runic magic and runic divination were published from the 1980s onward. The first book on runic divination, written by Ralph Blum in 1982, led to the development of sets of runes designed for use in several such systems of
fortune telling, in which the runes are typically incised in clay, stone tiles, crystals, resin, glass, or polished stones, then either selected one-by-one from a closed bag or thrown down at random for reading. Later authors such as
Diana L. Paxson and
Freya Aswynn follow Blum (1989) in drawing a direct correlation between runic divination and
tarot divination. They may discuss runes in the context of "spreads" and advocate the usage of "rune cards". Modern authors like Ralph Blum sometimes include a "blank rune" in their sets. Some were to replace a lost rune, but according to Ralph Blum this was the god
Odin's rune, the rune of the beginning and the end, representing "the divine in all human transactions".
Ralph Blum In 1982, a modern usage of the runes for answering life's questions was apparently originated by
Ralph Blum in his
divination book
The Book of Runes: A Handbook for the Use of an Ancient Oracle, which was marketed with a small bag of round tiles with runes stamped on them. This book has remained in print since its first publication. The sources for Blum's divinatory interpretations, as he explained in
The Book of Runes itself, drew heavily on then-current books describing the ancient
I Ching divination system of China. Each of Blum's seven books on runic divination deals with a specialized area of life or a varied technique for reading runes: •
The Book of Runes: A Handbook for the Use of an Ancient Oracle: The Viking Runes (1982); revised 10th Anniversary Edition (1992); revised 25th Anniversary Edition (2007). •
The Rune Cards: Sacred Play for Self Discovery (1989); reissued as
The Rune Cards: Ancient Wisdom For the New Millennium (1997). Rather than rune stones, this book uses images of the runes printed on card stock, much like a set of
trading cards or
tarot cards. •
The Healing Runes with co-author Susan Loughan (1995) teaches methods for using runic divination in the context of health and personal integration. •
Rune Play: A Method of Self Counseling and a Year-Round Rune Casting Record Book (1996) •
The Serenity Runes: Five Keys to the Serenity Prayer with co-author Susan Loughan (1998); reissued as
The Serenity Runes: Five Keys to Spiritual Recovery (2005) utilizes runic divination as a method for assisting
self-help and recovery from addictions; the title is a reference to the well-known
Serenity prayer widely used in the
12-step program of
Alcoholics Anonymous. • ''Ralph H. Blum's Little Book of Runic Wisdom'' (2002). •
The Relationship Runes: A Compass for the Heart with co-author Bronwyn Jones (2003) shows how to use runic divination in matters of love and friendship. Blum has also written books on the
Tao Te Ching,
Zen Buddhism, and
UFOs.
Stephen Flowers In the wake of a 1984 dissertation on "Runes and Magic",
Stephen Flowers published a series of books under the pen-name "Edred Thorsson" which detailed his own original method of runic divination and magic, "odianism", which he said was loosely based on historical sources and modern European
hermeticism. These books were: •
Futhark: A Handbook of Rune Magic (1984) •
Runelore: A Handbook of Esoteric Runology (1987) •
At The Well of Wyrd (1988) which was later reprinted under the title
Runecaster’s Handbook: The Well of Wyrd. •
Northern Magic: Rune Mysteries and Shamanism (2002). Runic divination is a component of Flowers' "esoteric runology" course offered to members of his Rune-Gild, as detailed in
The Nine Doors of Midgard: A Curriculum of Rune-Work. Besides runic divination, Flowers also advocated the "runic gymnastics" (
Runengymnastik) developed in the 1920s by
Friedrich Marby, under the name of "Rune-Yoga" (also "Runic Yoga", "Stadhagaldr").
Stephan Grundy In 1990,
Stephan Grundy, a.k.a. Kveldulf Gundarsson, described runic magic as the active principle as opposed to passive interpretations based on runic divination. He held that runic magic is more active than the allegedly
shamanic practice of
seid practiced by the
Seiðkona. Runic magic, he states, uses the runes to affect the world outside based on the
archetypes they represent. Most of Gundarsson's runic magic entails being in possession of a physical entity that is engraved with any or all of the individual runes or "staves", so as to practically work with their energies. The individual runes are reddened with either blood, dyes, or paints. The act of possessing the stave in its final form serves the purpose of affecting the world of form with "the rune might" of that particular stave. After use, the staves are discarded or destroyed. Gundarsson holds that each rune has a certain sound to it, to be chanted or sung; the sound has in common the phonetic value by which it is represented. This act of singing or chanting is supposed to have more or less the same effect of using the staves in their physical form.
Other • Nigel Pennick proposes "Germanic Runic Astrology" in publications such as
Runic Astrology: Starcraft and Timekeeping in the Northern Tradition (1995), . •
Freya Aswynn has published interpretations of the runes based on her own meditations in
Leaves of Yggdrasil: Runes, Gods, Magic, Feminine Mysteries, and Folklore Llewellyn Worldwide (1990), and
Northern Mysteries and Magick: Runes, Gods & Feminine Powers (1998),
Llewellyn Worldwide . • Adam Byrn Tritt, in
Runic Divination in the Welsh Tradition (2011) presents a system based on a 10-stone set, including nine symbols which are unrelated to the historical runes, plus a blank stone, which represents the querent (inquirer). •
Diana L. Paxson deals with the subject of runic divination and the use of the runes in magical spell-casting in her book
Taking Up The Runes: A Complete Guide To Using Runes In Spells, Rituals, Divination, And Magic (2005). • Wendy Christine Duke in
Spiral of Life (2008) presents a divination system based on organizing a set of 41 "revealed images" based on the runic letters. • A. D. Mercer,
Runen - The Wisdom of the Runes (2016) reintroduces the
Armanen Runes. • Saemarr þorsgoði (Peter Seymour), Produced during the 1980s, a tape recording "Runes" giving advice on the use and divination practice of runes, including theoretical Galdrar (chanting) of the rune names of the Elder Futhark for ritual use. ==See also==