Dagstorp Runestone

The Dagstorp Runestone, designated as DR 325 in the Rundata catalog, is a Viking Age memorial runestone that was discovered at Dagstorp, which is about two kilometers northwest of Kävlinge, Scania, Sweden.

This granite runestone, which is 1.58 meters in height, was discovered in 1910 by a farmer broken into 104 pieces in a mound in Dagstorp.

[1] The Dagstorp Runestone was reconstructed in 1929 and is currently located at the Kulturen in Lund where it is known as the Dagstorpsten.

This is the classification for those inscriptions where the ends of the runic bands are straight and do not have any attached serpent or beast heads.

The runemaster, who did not sign the inscription, used a punctuation mark × between each word in the text.

The reconstructed Dagstorp Runestone.