Scottish theory Haggis is popularly assumed to be of
Scottish origin, but many countries have produced similar dishes with different names. However, the recipes as known and standardised now are distinctly Scottish. The first known written recipes for a dish of the name, made with
offal and herbs, are as "hagese", in the verse cookbook
Liber Cure Cocorum dating from around 1430 in
Lancashire,
north west England, and, as "hagws of a schepe" from an English cookbook also of c. 1430. The earlier (1390) book
The Forme of Cury by
Richard II of England's master cooks includes a dish of grated meat in a pig's caul, without using such a name. The Scottish poem "
Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy", which is dated before 1520 (the generally accepted date prior to the death of
William Dunbar, one of the composers), refers to "haggeis". An early printed recipe for haggis appears in 1615 in
The English Huswife by
Gervase Markham. It contains a section entitled "Skill in Oate meale": "The use and vertues of these two severall kinds of Oate-meales in maintaining the Family, they are so many (according to the many customes of many Nations) that it is almost impossible to recken all"; and then proceeds to give a description of "oat-meale mixed with blood, and the Liver of either Sheepe, Calfe or Swine, maketh that pudding which is called the Haggas or Haggus, of whose goodnesse it is in vaine to boast, because there is hardly to be found a man that doth not affect them." (Gervase Markham,
The English Huswife) In her book
The Haggis: A Little History, Dickson Wright suggests that haggis was invented as a way of cooking quick-spoiling
offal near the site of a hunt, without the need to carry along an additional cooking vessel. The liver and kidneys could be
grilled directly over a fire, but this treatment was unsuitable for the stomach, intestines, or lungs. Haggis was "born of necessity, as a way to utilize the least expensive cuts of meat and the innards as well".
Norse theory , a relative of haggis
Clarissa Dickson Wright says that it "came to Scotland in a
longship [i.e., from
Scandinavia] even before Scotland was a single nation". She cites etymologist
Walter William Skeat as further suggestion of possible Scandinavian origins: Skeat claimed that the
hag– element of the word is derived from or the
Old Icelandic hoggva, meaning 'to hew → chop → hack', same as in
Modern Scots:
hag, 'to hew' or strike with a sharp weapon, relating to the chopped-up contents of the dish. The related Nordic variations of the root dish are traditionally called ”hew/chop-food”: , , , in modern Swedish renamed to
pölsa. ==Folklore==