Hogganvik runestone
The Hogganvik runestone is a fifth-century runestone, bearing an Elder Futhark inscription, that was discovered in September 2009 by Arnfinn Henriksen, a resident of Hogganvik, in the Sånum-Lundevik area of Mandal, Vest-Agder, Norway, while working in the garden.
Description
The Hogganvik runestone is a stone slab of about, weighing approximately. It was lying face down and the runic inscription is therefore well preserved. The inscription, which is in Proto-Norse, can be approximately dated to between 350 and 500 CE and consists of 62 characters, one a bind-rune. This is an exceptionally long text for the early period, either the second longest after that of the Tune stone, or possibly the third; the inscription on the Rö stone has missing and illegible runes.A report was issued in October 2009 by runologist James E. Knirk, and provides a transliteration of the inscription.