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Tun

Tun is a historical term with two principal senses: a large cask for storing liquids and a unit of volume used in medieval and early modern trade. As a container, a tun was typically a sizable wooden cask, secured with hoops, designed to hold wine, beer, oil, or other liquids. Tuns were common in ports and warehouses across Europe and were important for measuring shipments and storage capacity in commercial practice.

As a unit of volume, the tun referred to the amount such a cask could hold. The

Etymology and context: the word derives from Old English tun, meaning a large cask or tank, and

In modern usage, tun survives primarily as a historical term rather than a contemporary measurement. It is

exact
capacity
varied
by
region
and
era,
but
the
tun
generally
signified
a
large
volume,
commonly
regarded
as
roughly
around
a
cubic
meter
(about
1,000
liters).
In
historical
records,
merchants
and
guilds
often
used
the
tun
as
a
standardized
measure
for
trading
quantities,
cask
inventory,
and
taxation
calculations.
is
related
to
cognate
terms
in
other
medieval
languages
such
as
Old
French
tonneau.
Over
time,
the
sense
of
tun
as
a
unit
faded
from
everyday
use
and
is
now
encountered
mainly
in
historical
writings,
archaeology,
and
discussions
of
old
trade
practices.
encountered
in
discussions
of
medieval
economy,
port
towns,
and
literature
describing
past
cask-based
storage
and
commerce.
See
also
wine
cask
and
tonneau
for
related
concepts.