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The Honeymoon
by Charles Panati


There is a vast difference between the original meaning of "honeymoon" and its present-day
connotation - a blissful, much-sought seclusion as prelude to married life.  The words
antecedent, the ancient Norse
hjunottsmanathr,  is, we'll see, cynical in meaning, and the
seclusion is bespeaks was once anything but blissful.
When a man from a Northern European community abducted a bride from a neighboring
village, it was imperative that he take her into hiding for a period of time.  Friends bade him
safety, and his whereabouts were known only to his best man.  When the bride's family
abandoned their search, he returned to his own people.  At least, that is a popular explanation
offered by folklorists for the origin of the honeymoon; honeymoon meant hiding.  For couples
whose affections were mutual, the daily chores and hardships of village life did not allow for
the luxury of days or weeks of blissful idleness.

The Scandinavian word for "honeymoon" derives in part from an ancient Northern European
custom.  Newlyweds, for the first month of married life, drank a daily cup of honeyed wine
called mead.  Both the drink and the practice of stealing brides are part of the history of Attila,
king of the Asiatic Huns from A.D. 433 to 453.  The warrior guzzled tankards of the alcoholic
distillate at his marriage in 450 to the Roman princess Honoria, sister of Emperor Valentinian
III.  Attila abducted her from a previous marriage and claimed her for his own - along with
laying claim to the western half of the Roman Empire.  Three years later, at another feast,
Attila's unquenchable passion for mead led to an excessive consumption that induced
vomiting, stupor, coma, and his death.

While the "honey" in the word "honeymoon" derives straightforwardly from the honeyed wine
mead, the "moon" stems from a cynical inference.  To Northern Europeans, the term "moon"
connoted the celestial body's monthly cycle; its combination with "honey" suggested that all
moons or months of married life were not as sweet as the first.  During the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries, British prose writers and poets frequently employed the Nordic
interpretation of honeymoon as a waxing and waning of marital affection.