Today it is housed in the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History in Oslo.
The Tune stone is possibly the oldest Norwegian attestation of burial rites, inheritance, and beer.
[3] The A side reads: The B side reads: The transcription of the runic text is: The English translation is: The name Wiwaz means 'the promised one', from Proto-Indo-European *h₁wegʷʰ-ós[citation needed], while Woduridaz means 'fury-rider'.
[3] The phrase witandahlaiban, translated as 'my lord', literally means 'ward-bread' or 'guardian of the bread'.
The runic inscription was first interpreted by Sophus Bugge in 1903 and Carl Marstrander in 1930, but the full text was not interpreted convincingly until 1981 by Ottar Grønvik in his book Runene på Tunesteinen.