The Grumpan bracteate, designated as runic inscription Vg 207 by Rundata, is a gold C-bracteate found in Västergötland, Sweden in 1911.
The Grumpan bracteate is notable as it has a sequential listing of the elder futhark runic alphabet:
Transliteration:
Scandinavian runemasters from an early date divided the twenty-four runes of the elder futhark into three groups of eight runes called an ætt.[2] On the Grumpan bracteate, the runes of each ætt are separated by a row of dots.[2]
Because the Grumpan bracteate is damaged, it does not indicate every rune of the elder futhark.[3] The Kylver stone has the entire listing of the elder furthark, and portions of the sequential listing have also been found on the Vadstena bracteate, Charnay Fibula, and a pillar found at Breza near Sarajevo.[3]