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Drinking Horn
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston, MA
Drinking Horn
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston, MA

Drinking Horn

Artifact IDMO 63.2470.3
Object Type Horn, Drinking
Date 19th century
Date Presented9/62
Place MadeRussia, Europe
Medium Bovine horn, silver, niello
DimensionsOverall W 12 in x L 4 1/2 in (30.5 cm x 11.4 cm )

Physical DescriptionDrinking horn made from a bovine horn, decorated with engraved silver and niello (a metallic alloy of sulfur and silver) at the bottom tip and the mouth piece. Attached to the horn is a silver chain strap.
Historical NoteOne of a set of four drinking horns sent to President Kennedy by Soviet Premier Khrushchev, along with several bottles of Georgian wine in September of 1962, shortly before the Cuban Missile Crisis would change US-Russian relations.

Drinking horns probably originated with nomadic peoples but were known in antiquity as rhytons and were made both by Persian goldsmiths in precious metals and semi-precious stones and by Greek potters in fine red-figured ware. The ancient Scandinavians drank mead from them, and the same custom may have been practiced in Russia.
Additional Details
Custodial History NoteItem was a gift to President and Mrs. Kennedy from Nikita Khrushchev, Premier of the USSR. It was donated to the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library by the Estate of President John F. Kennedy in 1965.
Credit LineJohn F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston, MA; Gift of the Estate of President John F. Kennedy
Use Restriction StatusUnrestrictedUse Restriction NoteThis material is not subject to any known copyright or other image use restrictions.
Subjects
Not on view