Skårby Runestones

This is the classification for inscriptions where the end of the text bands are straight, and there are no attached serpent or beast heads.

A Danish catalog number is used as Scania during the Viking Age, which was part of the historic area of Denmark.

The stone was originally located at the Skårby church but has been moved to the Kulturen museum in Lund.

The inscription states that Tumi owned Guðissnapi, which today is the nearby village of Gusnava.

[2] The Skårby 2 runestone is listed as DR 281 in the Rundata catalog and consists of runic text in a band that runs along the sides of the stone.

Skårby Church , Scania, Sweden, where the runestones were originally located.
The Skårby 1 runestone.
The Skårby 2 runestone.