|  | Runes, Carlisle  
Cathedral 
 Dr. Charlton then read a paper on the Runic Inscriptions  
from Carlisle and Falstone. Introducing his subject he  
noticed the paucity of Runic inscriptions in Britain,  
although many parts of the island were long under  
Scandinavian rule. ...
 ... ...
 ... Dr. Charlton next took up the Runic inscription recently 
found in Carlisle cathedral, surrounded by marks of the  
working masons. ... The Carlisle inscription is pure  
Scandinavian - one of the few Norse records that have been  
discovered in the island. ... In the present year, upon an  
ordinary wall-stone inside of the west wall of the south  
transept of Carlisle cathedral, near to the S.W. angle, and  
about three feet above the floor, was discovered, by Mr. C.  
H. Purday, the intelligent clerk of the works now in  
progress, the inscription already mentioned. It had been  
covered over with plaster and white-wash; and to this, in  
all probability, it owes its present state of preservation - 
for the letters are but faintly scratched with a tool. The  
words appear to be - "TOLF(O)HN(AR) RAITA THEKSI RUNR A  
THISI STAIN" (the letters between parentheses being  
doubtful). No proper name, known to Dr. Charlton, answers to
 
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