Advent Calendar for Grown-ups

by Paul Bommer

DECEMBER 4 Boar's Head

Boar's Head
Illustration by Paul Bommer
Used by permission

Long before the Turkey, and even before the Goose, the traditional centre-piece of any Tudor or Medieval Yule-tide feast worth its salt (if indeed a 'centre' could be found amongst all the pies, roasts, marchpanes and sweetmeats!) was the roasted head of a Wild Boar, replete with apple or citron in its mouth.

According to folklorists the boar's head tradition was:

"initiated in all probability on the Isle of Britain by the Anglo-Saxons, although our knowledge of it comes substantially from medieval times. . . .[In ancient Norse tradition] sacrifice carried the intent of imploring Freyr to show favor to the new year. The boar's head with apple in mouth was carried into the banquet hall on a gold or silver dish to the sounds of trumpets and the songs of minstrels." In Scandinavia and England, St. Stephen may have inherited some of Freyr's legacy. His Feast Day is December 26 (Boxing Day) and thus he came to play a part in the Yuletide celebrations which were previously associated with Freyr (or Ingwi to the Anglo-Saxons). In old Swedish art, Stephen is shown as tending to horses and bringing a boar's head to a Yuletide banquet. Both elements are extracanonical and may be pagan survivals. Christmas Ham is an old tradition in Sweden & England, and may have originated as a winter solstice boar sacrifice to Freyr.

The Boar (or just its head) was adopted by Richard III ( A Horse! A Horse! My Kingdom for a Horse!) as an heraldic badge, a fact still commemorated to-day by a smattering of taverns across the land named the Boar's Head.

So, now you know!


From Paul Bommer: Illustration, design & Print-making. Used by permission.>

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