It is possible that it was made in memory of a Viking warrior who died in service of King Canute the Great,[3] and the creature on the stone may represent Sleipnir, Odin's eight-legged horse.[4]
Inscription
Latin transliteration:
: k-na : let : legia : st¶in : þensi : auk : tuki :
Old Norse transcription:
G[i]nna(?)/G[í]na(?) lét leggja stein þenna ok Tóki.
English translation:
"Ginna(?)/Gína(?) had this stone laid and (i.e. with) Tóki."
^Simon Keynes: The Burial of King Æthelred the Unready at St Paul’s. W: The English and Their Legacy, 900-1200. Essays in Honour of Ann Williams. edited by David Roffe. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2012, s. 141-142. ISBN978-1-84383-794-7.
^Forte, Oram, and Pedersen (2005), Viking Empires, ISBN0-521-82992-5 p. 73
Sources
Barnes, Michael P. & Page, Raymond I. The Scandinavian runic inscriptions of Britain. Uppsala: Institutionen för nordiska språk - Uppsala universitet, 2006.