of the 6th to 5th centuries BC. Many of them depict warriors holding a drinking horn in their right hand. drinking horn (iron with sheet gold ornaments, capacity 5.5 litres) Both in the Greek and the Scythian sphere, vessels of clay or metal shaped like horns were used alongside actual horns from an early time. A Late Archaic (ca. 480 BC)
Attic red-figure vase shows
Dionysus and a
satyr each holding a drinking horn. During Classical Antiquity, the
Thracians and
Scythians in particular were known for their custom of drinking from horns (archaeologically, the
Iron Age "
Thraco-Cimmerian" horizon).
Xenophon's account of his dealings with the Thracian leader
Seuthes suggests that drinking horns were integral part of the drinking
kata ton Thrakion nomon ("after the Thracian fashion").
Diodorus gives an account of a feast prepared by the
Getic chief
Dromichaites for
Lysimachus and selected captives, and the Getians' use of drinking vessels made from horn and wood is explicitly stated. The Scythian elite also used horn-shaped
rhyta made entirely from precious metal. A notable example is the 5th century BC gold-and-silver
rhython in the shape of a
Pegasus which was found in 1982 in Ulyap,
Adygea, now at the Museum of Oriental Art in Moscow. M.I. Maksimova (1956) in an archaeological survey of Scythian drinking horns distinguished two basic types (excluding vessels of clearly foreign origin), a strongly curved type, and a slender type with only slight curvature; the latter type was identified as based on auroch's horns by Maksimova (1956:221). This typology became standard in Soviet-era archaeology. There are a few artistic representation of Scythians actually drinking from horns from the rim (rather than from the horn's point as with
rhyta). The oldest remains of drinking horns or
rhyta known from Scythian burials are dated to the 7th century BC, reflecting Scythian contact with oriental culture during their raids of the
Assyrian Empire at that time. After these early specimens, there is a gap with only sparse evidence of Scythian drinking horns during the 6th century. Drinking horns re-appear in the context of Pontic burials in the 5th century BC: these are the specimens classified as Scythian drinking horns by Maksimova (1956). The 5th-century BC practice of depositing drinking horns with precious metal fittings as grave goods for deceased warriors appears to originate in the
Kuban region. In the 4th century BC, the practice spreads throughout the Pontic Steppe. Rhyta, mostly of Achaemenid or Thracian import, continue to be found in Scythian burials, but they are now clearly outnumbered by Scythian drinking horns proper. Around the midpoint of the 4th century BC, a new type of solid silver drinking horn with strong curvature appears. While the slightly curving horn type is found throughout the Pontic Steppe, specimens of the new type have not been found in the Kuban area. The custom of depositing drinking horns as grave goods begins to subside towards the end of the 4th century BC. The depiction of drinking horns on
kurgan stelae appears to follow a slightly different chronology, with the earliest examples dated to the 6th century BC, and a steep increase in frequency during the 5th, but becoming rare by the 4th century (when actual deposits of drinking horns become most frequent). In the Crimean peninsula, such depictions appear somewhat later, from the 5th century BC, but then more frequently than elsewhere. Scythian drinking horns have been found almost exclusively in warrior burials. This has been taken as strongly suggesting an association of the drinking horn with the Scythian cult of kingship and warrior ethos. In the influential interpretation due to
M. I. Rostovtzeff (1913), the Scythian ruler received the drinking horn from a deity as a symbol of his investiture. This interpretation is based on a number of depictions of a Scythian warrior drinking from a horn standing or kneeling next to a seated woman. Rolle (1980) interpreted the woman not as a goddess but as a high-ranking Scythian woman performing a ritual office. Krausse (1996) interpreted the same scenes as depicting a marriage ceremony, with the man drinking from the horn as part of an
oath ritual comparable to the scenes of Scythian warriors jointly drinking from a horn in an oath of
blood brotherhood. The Scythian drinking horns are clearly associated with the consumption of
wine. The drinking horn reached
Central Europe with the
Iron Age, in the wider context of "
Thraco-Cimmerian" cultural transmission. A number of early
Celtic (
Hallstatt culture) specimens are known, notably the remains of a huge gold-banded horn found at the
Hochdorf burial. Krauße (1996) examines the spread of the "fashion" of drinking horns (
Trinkhornmode) in prehistoric Europe, assuming it reached the eastern
Balkans from
Scythia around 500 BC. It is more difficult to assess the role of plain animal horns as everyday drinking vessels, because these decay without a trace, while the metal fittings of the ceremonial drinking horns of the elite are preserved archaeologically.
Julius Caesar has a description of
Gaulish use of aurochs drinking horns (
cornu urii) in
Commentarii de Bello Gallico 6.28: :
„Amplitudo cornuum et figura et species multum a nostrorum boum cornibus differt. Haec studiose conquisita ab labris argento circumcludunt atque in amplissimis epulis pro poculis utuntur.“ :"The [Gaulish] horns in size, shape, and kind are very different from those of our cattle. They are much sought-after, their rim fitted with silver, and they are used at great feasts as drinking vessels." ==Migration period==