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The Boar's Head

Posted: August 23, 2014
Updated: October 10, 2014

The Festival we know today originated at Queen's College, Oxford, England in 1340. Legend has it that a scholar was studying a book of Aristotle while walking through the forest on his way to Christmas Mass. Suddenly, he was confronted by an angry wild boar. Having no other weapon, the resourceful Oxonian rammed his metal-bound philosophy book down the throat of the charging animal, whereupon the brute choked to death. That night the boar's head, finely dressed and garnished, was borne in procession to the dining room, accompanied by carolers singing "in honor of the King of bliss."

By 1607, an expansive ceremony was in use at St. John's College, Cambridge, England. There, the boar's head was accompanied by "mustard for the eating" and decorated with flags and sprigs of evergreen, bay rosemary and holly. It was carried in state to the strains of the Boar's Head carol, still sung in the Christ Church ceremony.



C.K. Wang, photo

With Boars being in short supply in the forests of Cincinnati, a hog's head is dressed to represent the boar. It is roasted and garnished, but not eaten. Boar's tusks were carved for the first Boar's Head here. The three flags in his head represents the ceremony's British roots, the French Huguenots who brought it to Colonial America and our own nation.

The property crew decorate the Boar's Head.
©2014 Constance Sanders


Many thanks to Suzann Parker Leist for donating the black head for many years. Each year, after a local farm hog is butchered for its meat, the head is deep frozen. It rests in the Cathedral freezer until ready to roast. 

Suzann Parker Leist with the Boar's Head, 2011

The Boar's Head Company
©2010 Constance Sanders 



The Boar's Head Company, about 1958. Frank Pandorf, left 
and Ralph Kendrick, right
Boar's Head photo archive

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