A drinking horn was a drinking vessel formerly common in some parts of the world.
Drinking horns were common amongst the Norse and the Anglo-Saxons, and Thor was supposed to have had a famous one. They also feature in Beowulf, and fittings for drinking horns were also found at the Sutton Hoo burial site. Carved horns are mentioned in the Elder Edda (composed about 1000 AD):
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.
Artifacts in Norse mythology | Anglo-Saxon England | Viking Age | Drinkware | Archaeological artefact types
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"Drinking horn".
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