A Forest Green Glass Drinking Boot
By Judy Stuart
There
is an old saying in southern Germany, that a man who cannot drink his
boot full of beer is not a true Bavarian. Because of the
popularity of this saying and the probable dis-like of people drinking
from their own boot, manufacturers in Germany made drinking vessels in
the shape of boots primarily from glass and ceramics.
While
not exactly a drinking boot, this vessel represents a woman's leg with
an elegant slipper. The glass is considered forest glass, made to
look as unadulterated glass would look if clarifying and decoloring
agents had not been added to the molten mixture. The design of
the glass is quilted both inside and out. Such patterning took extra
time and effort and was done when the object was blown. The elegant
silver plate slipper and top rim were made especially for this piece by
WMF (Wurtembergische Metallwarenfabrik), as marked on both the rim and
the heel. WMF is a very prestigious Wurtemberg firm still in
business today making kitchenwares but which made elegant table ware,
presentation items, etc. in the late 1800s.
The foot of the slipper is engraved to Ernst Herzmann who served as an
officer in an organization which presented this drinking boot to him on
September 27, 1896. Drinking boots were common drinking vessels in
German pubs at schools, universities and other locations for groups of
younger drinkers. Insignias of fraternities, nine pin teams and
commercial logos were often added to the boots. They were used in
drinking games and as challenges to ‘outsiders’ who were unaccustomed
to drinking from a boot. Unknowing drinkers may raise the boot
with the toe up or toe down and find themselves covered in a bath of
beer as the air lock has to break to bring the liquid to the
lips. But when one takes a drink with the toe to the left or to
the right, there is no sudden flood of beer.