A 'drinking horn' was a
drinking vessel formerly common in some parts of the world, and notably in Northern Europe.
Use
:"All of the Northern
European nations formerly drank out of horns, which were commonly those of the ''
urus'' or
European buffalo. These horns were carefully dressed up and their edges lipped all round with
silver. One of these immense horns, at least, an ox-horn of prodigious size is still preserved in
Dunvegan Castle on the
Isle of Skye in
Scotland. It was only produced before guests, and the drinker in using it, twisted his arms round its spines, and turning his mouth towards the right shoulder, was expected to drain it off." (''Dwelly’s [Scottish] Gaelic Dictionary'': Còrn)
Drinking horns were common amongst the
Norse and the
Anglo-Saxons. In the ''
Prose Edda'',
Thor drank from a horn that unbeknownst to him contained all the seas, and in the process he scared
Útgarða-Loki and his kin by managing to drink a conspicuous part of its content. They also feature in
Beowulf, and fittings for drinking horns were also found at the
Sutton Hoo burial site. Carved horns are mentioned in ''
Guðrúnarkviða II'', a poem composed about 1000 AD and preserved in the ''
Elder Edda'':

A modern, functional replica of a small drinking horn.
| :Váru à horni :hvers kyns stafir :ristnir ok roðnir, :- ráða ek né máttak, - :lyngfiskr langr, :lands Haddingja :ax óskorit, :innleið dyra.[1] | :On the horn’s face were there:All the kin of letters :Cut aright and reddened, :How should I rede them rightly? :The ling-fish long :Of the land of Hadding, :Wheat-ears unshorn, :And wild things inwards.[2] | |
The
Arthurian tale of
Caradoc also features the drinking horn.
Large drinking horns were also common among the
Thracians, often covered with worked silver or gold plating.
In parts of the ancient world, the drinking horn gave way to a horn-shaped drinking vessel called a "
Rhyton" fabricated from metal or clay. When drinking from a rhyton, the vessel is held upright and the liquid flows out of a hole in the end of the "horn", suggesting that natural drinking horns could have been used in the same manner. This would have enabled the same horn to be used for both drinking and for sounding.
They were in use, well into the
Middle Ages, dying out mainly in the 1600s.
Modern-day
Asatru adherents use drinking horns for
Blóts and
sumbels; the horn represents the
Well of Urd.
Drinking horns are also a significant cultural symbol in
Georgia.
Notes and references
1. Guðrúnarkviða II in Old Norse from «Kulturformidlingen norrøne tekster og kvad» Norway.
2. Morris' and Magnusson's translation.
See also
★
Cornucopia
★
Rhyton
External links
★
Horn as a drinking vessel
★
Drinking horn
★
Hochdorf drinking horns
References
★ Corn
★ ''The Second Lay of Guðrun'', in the ''Elder Edda'' (Morris and Magnusson translation)