No one knows when or where toasting got started. The Greek would
give a libation to the the Gods. The Romans would also require that a drink be
drunk to the emperor mostly because he was consider a god also. The
drinking of healths ( 1 ) was very common and when the term
"toast" was first used in reference to drinking the health is an
interesting philological issue ( 2 )
( 1 ) From THE DICTIONARY OF
PHRASE AND FABLE BY E. COBHAM BREWER
FROM THE NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION OF 1894
found at http://www.bootlegbooks.com/Reference/PhraseAndFable/data/381.html
:
Drinking Healths was a Roman
custom. Thus, in Plautus, we read of a man drinking to his mistress with these
words: "Bene vos, bene nos, bene te, bene me, bene nostrum etiam
Stephanium " (Here's to you, here's to us all, here's to thee,
here's to me, here's to our dear ---- ). (Stich. v. 4.) Persius (v. l,
20) has a similar verse "Bene mihi; bene vobis, bene amicę nostrę
" (Here's to myself, here's to you, and here's to I shan't say who).
Martial, Ovid, Horace, etc., refer to the same custom.
The ancient Greeks drank healths. Thus, when Theramenes was
condemned by the Thirty Tyrants to drink hemlock, he said "Hoc pulcro
Critię ' - the man who condemned him to death.
The ancient Saxons followed the same habit, and Geoffrey of
Monmouth says that Hengist invited King Vortigern to a banquet to see his new
levies. After the meats were removed, Rowena, the beautiful daughter of Hengist,
entered with a golden cup full of wine, and, making obeisance, said, "Lauerd
kining, wacht heil ' (Lord King, your health). The king then drank and
replied, "Drinc heil ' (Here's to you). (Geoffrey of Monmouth,
book vi. 12.) Robert de Brunne refers to this custom:
"This is ther custom and hev gest
When they are at the ale or fest;
Ilk man that levis gware him drink
Salle say 'Wosseille' to him drink,
He that biddis sall say `Wassaile,'
The tother salle say again `Drinkaille.'
That says 'Woisseille' drinks of the cup,
Kiss and his felaw he gives it up."
Robert de Brunne.
In drinking healths we hold our hands up towards the person
toasted and say, "Your health . ." The Greeks handed the cup to the
person toasted and said, "This to thee," "Gręci in epulis
poculum alicui tradituri, eum nominare solent." Our holding out the
wine-glass is a relic of this Greek custom.
( 2 ) The earliest reference to drinking a
"toast" that I have been able to find is in SYVANIUS by Anon. (1595)
Act. III, scene ii. SILVANUS says: "Give me a cup, Ganymede, so I may
toast my Juno."
Search here: http://eee.uci.edu/~papyri/sylvanus/contents.html
for toasts!
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