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Golden Horns of Gallehus

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Golden Horns of Gallehus

The Golden Horns of Gallehus were two horns made of sheet gold, discovered in Gallehus, north of Møgeltønder in Southern Jutland, Denmark. The horns dated to the early 5th century, i.e. the beginning of the Germanic Iron Age. The horns were found in 1639 and in 1734, respectively, at locations only some 15–20 metres apart. They were composed of segments of double sheet gold. The two horns were found incomplete; the longer one found in 1639 had seven segments with ornaments, to which six plain segments and a plain rim were added, possibly by the 17th-century restorer. The shorter horn found in 1734 had six segments, a narrow one bearing a Proto-Norse Elder Futhark inscription at the rim and five ornamented with images. It is uncertain whether the horns were intended as drinking horns, or as blowing horns, although drinking horns have more pronounced history as luxury items made from precious metal. The original horns were stolen and melted down in 1802. Casts made of the horns in the late 18th century were also lost. Replicas of the horns must thus rely on 17th and 18th-century drawings exclusively and are accordingly fraught with uncertainty. Nevertheless, replicas of the original horns were produced, two of them exhibited at the National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, with copies at e.g. the Moesgaard Museum, near Aarhus, Denmark. These replicas also have a history of having been stolen and retrieved twice, in 1993 and in 2007. The horns are the subject of one of the best-known poems in Danish literature, "The Golden Horns" (Guldhornene), by Adam Oehlenschläger.

Tables

· Description › Iconography
A
A
horn
A
segment
1
in relief
two rows of anthropomorphic and theriomorphic figures, including snakes and fish (Hartner's cipher runes)
in chasing
Two intertwining snakes and five four-pointed stars
A
A
horn
A
segment
2
in relief
Five figures, four anthropomorphic, including one on horseback, one armed with a bow, one holding a drinking horn, besides a horse without a rider.
in chasing
five mythological hybrid figures,
A
A
horn
A
segment
3
in relief
an armed figure standing behind a prostrate body (similar to the arrangement on the 4th segment of the second horn), a centaur, and two figures with dogs' heads.
in chasing
intertwining snake figures, one with a human torso
A
A
horn
A
segment
4
in relief
another armed figure and three animals.
in chasing
five snakes, one four-pointed star
A
A
horn
A
segment
5
in relief
two figures playing a board game, with a creature sitting beneath the board, two snakes, and a fish.
in chasing
four snakes and a number of small stars
A
A
horn
A
segment
6
in relief
five images in a row, two of them dogs (of which one is facing a sun or star), the others possibly plants.
A
A
horn
A
segment
7
in relief
three symbols of unclear significance, two plant-like and one like two boards or flags with triple dots or holes
in chasing
a vertical dotted line, and an arrangement of vertical wavy and zig-zag lines
B
B
horn
B
segment
1
in chasing
the Elder Futhark inscription
B
B
horn
B
segment
2
in relief
four anthropomorphic figures, all of them armed, two of them with large horns or antlers. Between and below these are a number of theriomorphic figures, one of them with antlers. the two "sword-dancers" had an opening probably intended for a chain for carrying the horn
in chasing
Scattered among the figures are star symbols with three to eight points and a number of animals, including a fish
B
B
horn
B
segment
3
in relief
two anthropomorphic figures, one armed with a bow aiming at an animal figure, and one with three heads holding an axe in one hand, and a rope attached to an antlered or horned animal, perhaps a goat. Three snakes, a large one holding a ball in its mouth and two smaller ones biting the belly of the larger one. Lincoln (1976) takes the tricephalous figure, the tethered horned animal, and the three snakes "lying dead" as a Germanic reflex of the Indo-European dragon-slaying and cattle-raiding myth.
in chasing
other theriomorphic figures and star symbols.
B
B
horn
B
segment
4
in relief
a rider on horseback, another figure holding a sword standing in front of a prostrate body, and a centaur. A horse-like animal with a head on each end and no tail. A curling snake facing or devouring a plant-like item which may represent the wyrm (dragon) Níðhöggr devouring the roots of Yggdrasill
in chasing
fish shapes and star symbols.
B
B
horn
B
segment
5
in relief
a figure holding a large sickle or sword in the left hand, and holding a horse on a tether in the right hand. Two dogs.
in chasing
boar, bird and fish figures
B
B
horn
B
segment
6
in relief
four anthropomorphic figures, one armed with a bow, one with two daggers, one holding its right foot in its right hand, and one apparently decapitated,
in chasing
four fish figures and eight four-pointed stars.
horn
segment
in relief
in chasing
A
1
two rows of anthropomorphic and theriomorphic figures, including snakes and fish (Hartner's cipher runes)
Two intertwining snakes and five four-pointed stars
A
2
Five figures, four anthropomorphic, including one on horseback, one armed with a bow, one holding a drinking horn, besides a horse without a rider.
five mythological hybrid figures,
A
3
an armed figure standing behind a prostrate body (similar to the arrangement on the 4th segment of the second horn), a centaur, and two figures with dogs' heads.
intertwining snake figures, one with a human torso
A
4
another armed figure and three animals.
five snakes, one four-pointed star
A
5
two figures playing a board game, with a creature sitting beneath the board, two snakes, and a fish.
four snakes and a number of small stars
A
6
five images in a row, two of them dogs (of which one is facing a sun or star), the others possibly plants.
A
7
three symbols of unclear significance, two plant-like and one like two boards or flags with triple dots or holes
a vertical dotted line, and an arrangement of vertical wavy and zig-zag lines
B
1
the Elder Futhark inscription
B
2
four anthropomorphic figures, all of them armed, two of them with large horns or antlers. Between and below these are a number of theriomorphic figures, one of them with antlers. the two "sword-dancers" had an opening probably intended for a chain for carrying the horn
Scattered among the figures are star symbols with three to eight points and a number of animals, including a fish
B
3
two anthropomorphic figures, one armed with a bow aiming at an animal figure, and one with three heads holding an axe in one hand, and a rope attached to an antlered or horned animal, perhaps a goat. Three snakes, a large one holding a ball in its mouth and two smaller ones biting the belly of the larger one. Lincoln (1976) takes the tricephalous figure, the tethered horned animal, and the three snakes "lying dead" as a Germanic reflex of the Indo-European dragon-slaying and cattle-raiding myth.
other theriomorphic figures and star symbols.
B
4
a rider on horseback, another figure holding a sword standing in front of a prostrate body, and a centaur. A horse-like animal with a head on each end and no tail. A curling snake facing or devouring a plant-like item which may represent the wyrm (dragon) Níðhöggr devouring the roots of Yggdrasill
fish shapes and star symbols.
B
5
a figure holding a large sickle or sword in the left hand, and holding a horse on a tether in the right hand. Two dogs.
boar, bird and fish figures
B
6
four anthropomorphic figures, one armed with a bow, one with two daggers, one holding its right foot in its right hand, and one apparently decapitated,
four fish figures and eight four-pointed stars.

References

  1. Official Danish news (DR) page with fact box regarding the subject (in Danish); The horns are also identified as Tundere
    http://www.dr.dk/Nyheder/Indland/2007/12/20/114905.htm?rss=true
  2. https://gyldendalogpolitikensdanmarkshistorie.lex.dk/Guldhornene_fra_Gallehus#:~:text=De%20to%20horn%20var%20konstrueret
    https://gyldendalogpolitikensdanmarkshistorie.lex.dk/Guldhornene_fra_Gallehus#:~:text=De%20to%20horn%20var%20konstrueret%20ens%3B%20begge%20var,og%20de%20var%20hver%20is%C3%A6r%20forsynet%20med%20b%C3%A6rek%C3%A6de
  3. Kiel University Archived 2009-04-26 at the Wayback Machine has a compilation of literature. Interpretation as a patronym
    http://www.runenprojekt.uni-kiel.de/abfragen/standard/deutung2.asp?findno=28&ort=Gallehus&objekt=Goldhorn
  4. review of Hartner (1969) by A. T. Reiche in Isis, The History of Science Society (1973), p. 236; cf. Beer (1970), p. 140
  5. Axel Olrik, Gudefremstillinger paa guldhornene og andre ældre mindesmærker, Danske Studier (1918), 1–35.
  6. Bruce Lincoln, The Indo-European Cattle-Raiding Myth, History of Religions (1976), p. 58.
  7. Published in German as Zuverlässiger Abriss des Anno 1734 bey Tundern gefundenen Güldenen Horns (1734), in Danish transl
  8. traffickingculture.org
    http://traffickingculture.org/encyclopedia/case-studies/golden-horns-of-gallehus/
  9. Moesgaard udstiller guldhorn Archived 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine
    http://jp.dk/indland/krimi/article1092023.ece
  10. Professionelle bag tyveri af guldhorn Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
    http://jp.dk/indland/krimi/article1091371.ece
  11. Trafficking Culture, http://traffickingculture.org/encyclopedia/case-studies/golden-horns-of-gallehus/
    http://traffickingculture.org/encyclopedia/case-studies/golden-horns-of-gallehus/
  12. Comparative textual media: transforming the humanities in the postprint era
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