Ancient Multiple Tiwaz runes Multiple Tiwaz runes either stacked atop one another to resemble a tree-like shape, or repeated after one another, appear several times in Germanic paganism: ::* The charm (
alu) on the
Lindholm amulet, dated from the 2nd to the 4th century, contains three consecutive
t runes, which have been interpreted as an invocation of Týr. ::* The
Kylver Stone (400 AD,
Gotland) features 8 stacked Tiwaz runes at the end of an Elder Futhark inscription. ::* From 500 AD, a Scandinavian
C-bracteate (
Seeland-II-C) features an Elder Futhark inscription ending with three stacked Tiwaz runes.
Poetic Edda According to the runologist Lars Magnar Enoksen, the Tiwaz rune is referred to in a stanza in
Sigrdrífumál, a poem in the
Poetic Edda.
Sigrdrífumál tells that
Sigurd has slain the dragon
Fafnir and arrives at a fortress of shields on top of a mountain which is lit by great fires. In the fortress, he finds an enchanted sleeping
valkyrie whom he wakes by cutting open her
corslet with his sword. The grateful valkyrie,
Sigrdrífa, offers him the secrets of the runes in return for delivering her from the sleep, on condition that he shows that he has no fear. She begins by teaching him that if he wants to achieve victory in battle, he is to carve "victory runes" on his sword and twice say the name "Týr" - the name of the Tiwaz rune.
Name in Futhorc Futhorc manuscripts give different names to the t-rune. Sangallensis 270 (9th century) and Vindobonensis 795 (9th century) call the rune "Ti", while Cotton MS Domitian A IX (10th century?) calls it "Tir", and the Byrhtferth's Manuscript (12th century) calls it "Tyr". Ti may be an uninflected form of the possessive "Tiwes" as found in "Tiwesdæg", which would make it the name of an English god. Similar spellings of this god's name (such as Tii) are attested to in Old English.
Modern Germanic neopaganism The Týr rune is commonly used by
Germanic neopagans to symbolize veneration of the god Týr.
Usage in Nazism and Neo-Nazism The Týr rune in
Guido von List's
Armanen Futharkh was based on the version found in the Younger Futhark. List's runes were later adopted and modified by
Karl Maria Wiligut, who was responsible for their adoption by the
Nazis, and they were subsequently widely used on insignia and literature during the
Third Reich. It was the badge of the
Sturmabteilung training schools, the
Reichsführerschulen in
Nazi Germany. In
World War II, it was adopted as the unit insignia of the
32nd SS Volunteer Grenadier Division "30 Januar". In
Neo-Nazism it has appeared, together with the
Sowilo rune, in the emblem of the
Kassel-based think tank
Thule Seminar. It has also appeared as the former logo of the fashion label
Thor Steinar, which was banned in Germany over resemblance to SS officer uniforms, and the
Scandinavia-based
Nordic Resistance Movement which uses the symbol onto a diamond with stripes (in the same shape as the Hitlerjugend flag) in green, white, and black. (It might also be noted that both these uses were technically incorrect, since both
Thor and
Thule would be spelled with a
thurisaz, ᚦ, rune.) The symbol was one of the numerous Nazi/neo-Nazi and fascist symbols/slogans used by the perpetrator of the
Christchurch mosque shootings Brenton Harrison Tarrant alongside the
Black Sun,
the Othala/Odal rune,
the Celtic Cross,
the Kolovrat swastika,
the Fourteen Words, and the Archangel Michael's Cross of the pro-Nazi
Romanian organization
Iron Guard.
Olympics In 2018 the symbol was incorporated on the sweaters of the 2018 Norwegian Alpine ski team. The sweaters were however quickly pulled from market, when the Nazi and far-right association raised controversy. ==Popular culture==