Possibly these personal runes were either normal runes from the Elder Futhark alphabet that spelt out initials, or a composed symbol combining several runes into a new symbol. Various wizards were known to have their own magic rune, that they used in a manner similar to a signature to sign documents or to indicate their possession of certain objects. The Anglo-Saxons eventually developed Elder Futhark into a new, modified runic alphabet named Futhorc. Although the Old English was known for using this alphabet, the Old Norse people also used it in the Old Norse language, in fact before the people of the British Isles did. The runes represented were used to write words in an alphabetic manner all belonged to the Old English runic alphabet (also known as Elder Futhark, or more literally Elder Fuþark). Symbols in the Elder Futhark runic alphabet, with their Latin equivalents There also was a magical rune of Alastor Moody's on the file in Umbridge's office in 1998, it is possible that these features were of particular importance, and served as a form of identification or a social security number. The teachers at Hogwarts had to provide their magic rune on an evaluation form given by Dolores Umbridge.
Runes were still widely used for administration purposes by the British Ministry of Magic. The esoteric The Quibbler magazine had been known to publish runic texts (including instructions for a spell to turn another's ears into kumquats). Many texts in Old English were completely written using runes, for example, Albus Dumbledore's old version of The Tales of Beedle the Bard, requiring translation before mass-production for the general public.
Many ancient magical items like the Hogwarts Pensieve and the Elder Wand contained runic inscriptions.Īn abundant amount of mathematical puzzles that featured runes were present within Hogwarts Castle during the 1890–1891 school year.
As such, runes were widely used by both the Early Medieval magical community as well as the Muggle community in Great Britain. Sirius Black's Azkaban placard, showing runic inscriptionsĭuring the Early Middle Ages, many famous wizards and witches (such as Merlin, the Peverell brothers and the founders of Hogwarts) very likely used runes to write in Old English.