| Name | Proto-Germanic | Old English | Old Norse | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| *Berkanan | Beorc | Bjarkan | ||
| "birch" | "birch"/"poplar"? | "birch" | ||
| Shape | Elder Futhark | Futhorc | Younger Futhark | |
|  |  |  | ||
| Unicode | ᛒ U+16D2 | ᛒ U+16D2 | ᛓ U+16D3 | |
| Transliteration | b | |||
| Transcription | b | |||
| IPA | [β] | [b] | [b], [p] | |
| Position in rune-row | 18 | 13 | ||
Berkanan is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic name of the b rune ᛒ, meaning "birch". In the Younger Futhark it is called Bjarkan in the Icelandic and Norwegian rune poems. In the Anglo-Saxon rune poem it is called beorc ("birch" or "poplar"). The corresponding Gothic letter is 𐌱 b, named bairkan.
The letter shape is likely directly  based on Old Italic  𐌁, whence comes also the Latin letter B.
 𐌁, whence comes also the Latin letter B.
The rune is recorded in all three rune poems:
| Rune Poem:[1] | English Translation: | 
| Old Norwegian
 | 
 | 
| Old Icelandic
 | 
 | 
| Anglo-Saxon
 | 
 | 
See also
References
- ↑ Original poems and translation from the Rune Poem Page Archived 1999-05-01 at the Wayback Machine.