photograph of current display in the Grand Vestibule

Grand Vestibule: The British Monarchy and the World

The Grand Vestibule at Windsor Castle reflects interaction between the monarchy and the wider world

CANADA

Powder horn

late eighteenth century

RCIN 62085

Powder horns were a central part of a soldier’s equipment in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. They held the gunpowder for firearms. Cow or ox horns were particularly suitable because they were a convenient shape for funnelling and pouring as well as being water- and fire-resistant. When not in use, they were worn slung over the shoulder by a strap threaded through suspension holes.

Soldiers whiling away the hours added engraved and coloured decoration to their powder horns, though sometimes this work was done by a professional. Maps were a popular subject. This horn is engraved with a map of Canada and a landscape view of New York – key sites of trade and warfare in the eighteenth century. The prominent royal coat of arms on this horn suggests it may have been owned by a British officer serving in Canada or by an American before the War of Independence.


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