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11[[quoteright:350:[[Webcomic/{{Oglaf}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screen_shot_2015_07_26_at_165448.png]]]]
12[[caption-width-right:350:"Bring me a mop made from the hair of an enemy!"]]
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14->''"Now for our national beverage, apple brandy drunk from the skulls of our enemies! It's a very heady liquor."''
15-->-- '''Timeandahaf''', ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'', ''Recap/AsterixAndTheNormans''
16
17When a fierce, trophy-collecting warrior wants to be practical, he won't just make the remains of his enemies into a fetish. He'll make them into something useful. Like a cup.
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19If you want to make somebody threatening or as a sure sign of villainy, this is a way to suggest that a person is so cold they are unaffected by drinking from the remains of their dead enemies, as well as it being a grand form of humiliation and a warning to other foes. The use of someone's skull as such may also be a threat used during a BadassBoast.
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21The beverage in question [[IDoNotDrinkWine may be blood]], but is typically wine or some sort of elixir that may necessarily need to be imbibed from an enemy's skull. Other situations in which this trope commonly occurs include proposing a toast to the defeat of the enemy in question or intentionally wrong Shakespeare parodies.
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23Drinking or eating brains from a skull is [[BrainFood a different thing]]. Compare CreepySouvenir.
24
25----
26!!Examples:
27
28[[foldercontrol]]
29
30[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
31* In ''Manga/{{Drifters}}'', Nobunaga admits to Olminu that he enjoys drinking in his spare time using mugs fashioned from the skulls of his dead enemies. Needless to say, this admission left Olminu scared of him.
32* In the ''VideoGame/SengokuBasara'' anime Oda Nobunaga is depicted drinking from a skull, which leaks from the eye sockets.
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Comic Books]]
36* In ''Recap/AsterixAndTheNormans'', the skull cups are used by said Normans.
37* ''ComicBook/TheFallOfDeadworld'' gives a variant: when Casey Tweed seizes control of Justice Department, he uses Judge Death's skull as an ashtray and waste bin.
38* ''ComicBook/RexMundi'': The HolyGrail turns out to be the skull of [[spoiler:John the Baptist.]]
39* In the Creator/DCComics CrisisCrossover ''Comicbook/UnderworldUnleashed'', when the major villains are gathered round a table in Hell, the Joker is drinking from a skull in a domino mask. With a crowbar for a stirring rod.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Fan Works]]
43* ''Crazy Irken and ?'' (''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim''-based crossover fic anthology by Creator/DRissing and Creator/{{nightmaster000}}. [[note]]Unable to link due to violating Content Policy, but it can be found on their Website/ArchiveOfOurOwn pages.[[/note]]): In the epilogue of the ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'' chapter, Zim is shown using Dib's skull as a drinking cup.
44* In "VideoGame/{{Cuphead}}: The Musical" ("We're Gonna Kill Off Cuphead"), the Devil's personal threat to the title character is to, if screwed with, "take my tea from your skull like cheap chinaware".
45* ''Fanfic/ThingsIAmNotAllowedToDoAtThePPC'':
46-->233. Sue skulls make great paperweights. They suck as drinking vessels.
47* Played for laughs in ''Fanfic/TwilightSparklesAwesomeAdventure''. [[KickTheDog To establish that Queen Celesia is evil]], the very first sentence of her very first scene reads:
48-->"Celesia was sitting on her I throne n Ponyland Castle, drinking blood out of a skull. ([[ButNotTooEvil Don't worry it's not a pony skull.]])." ''[sic]''
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
52* ''Film/BluesBrothers2000'': After the title characters rudely interrupt the funeral of a Russian mobster's nephew, an associate assures that they will become this. Filled with vodka, of course.
53* ''Film/DraculaUntold'': When the Elder Vampire gives his blood to Dracula to make him into a vampire, he smashes a skull to serve as a makeshift cup. Having been trapped in an accursed cave for centuries, he's presumably short on amenities.
54* ''Film/DriveAngry'': AntiHero John Milton drinks some booze from the skull of the deceased bad guy to make good on a promise he made him earlier in the film. He then takes it with him as a souvenir.
55* The Thuggees in ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheTempleOfDoom'' have a skull filled with "The Blood of Kali". They force their prisoners to drink it and it immediately induces a FaceHeelTurn.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Literature]]
59* In the {{narrative poem}} ''Balder Dead'' by Creator/MatthewArnold (1855), the gods and heroes in Valhalla are so shocked over the death of Balder, they desist from their usual habit of drinking wine from "horns and gold-rimmed sculls".
60* In the second ''Literature/DrGretaHelsing'' novel, self-proclaimed "king of the vampires" Corvin guzzles a blend of fine wine and blood from a cup fashioned from a human skull. Played with in that Corvin is a slimy edgelord wannabee who had the cup made from a random, centuries-dead skull from the Paris catacombs ... although it'd be entirely in-character if he were to ''pretend'' it was that of an enemy.
61* In ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'', Detritus has the cranium of a human's skull as an heirloom from his grandmother, which he shows to Vimes after they arrive at an embassy with a troll's head on a trophy wall. Evidently she used it as a bowl to keep small items in.
62* OlderThanFeudalism: ''Literature/TheHistories'' of Herodotus report that the Scythians made cups from the skulls of their vanquished enemies.
63* ''Literature/{{Indexing}}: Reflections'': Sloan, as she says in a MustHaveCaffeine rant:
64-->'''Sloane''': "I came for coffee. If you have consumed all the coffee, I am going to straight-up fucking murder you, and drink a latte out of your skull."
65* In the Latin translation of the Old Norse "Literature/{{Krakumal}}" a.k.a. "The Death-Song of Ragnar Lodbrok" made in 1635 by the Danish antiquarian Ole Worm, Ragnar Lodbrok expresses his belief that after his earthly demise, he will drink beer "from the curved hollows of skulls" in Odin's hall. In his commentary, Worm elaborated that the heroes of old "believed that in Odin's hall they would drink from the skulls of those they had slain". In reality, Worm's translation is wrong, as the Old Norse text actually means "from curved trees of the skull", which is to say, from drinking horns (because they grow on a bovine skull). As early translations of "Krákumál" into English were based on Worm's Latin version rather than the original, popular wisdom in Britain and elsewhere maintained far into the 19th century that Vikings used to drink from skull cups, or hoped to do so in the afterlife (they did neither).
66* The late Roman historiographer Ammianus Marcellinus (4th century AD) writes about the Scordisci, a Celtic tribe inhabiting a region of Thrace (now Serbia), and which he describes as "a people formerly cruel and savage", that in former times they used to sacrifice their prisoners "and from their hollowed skulls greedily to drink human blood" (book 27).
67* In the ''Literature/OurDumbCentury'' article "Christian Right Ascends To Heaven," Creator/CarlSagan's eternal punishment involves having his skull made into {{Satan}}'s drinking gourd.
68* Amos Cottle's 1797 translation of the ''Literature/PoeticEdda'' was prefaced with a dedicatory poem by Robert Southey, which claims that [[Literature/RagnarLodbrokAndHisSons the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok]], having put King Ella to death to avenge their father, believed they would drink mead from Ella's skull in the afterlife ("in the shield-roof'd hall they thought / One day from Ella's skull to quaff the mead").
69* Background for ''Literature/ThePrincessDiaries'', of all things. The founder of Mia's royal bloodline, Queen Rosamunde, was forcibly married by an invading general, who on their wedding night made her drink wine out of a cup made from her dead father's skull. She was so outraged by this that once he'd fallen asleep she strangled him with her long braid of hair. This impressed the General's followers so much that they accepted her as Queen instead.
70* The Chinese historian Sima Qian, writing in his ''Records of the Grand Historian'' about 350-400 years after Herodotus, reports that the Xiongnu nomads who frequently fought China during the Qin and Han eras, observed the custom of drinking out of skulls.
71* ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'': Banner-General Furyk Karede's eccentric manservant owns a drinking bowl made from the top of a skull. Karede finds it pretty creepy. Nonetheless, when he gets a surprise visit from StateSec and has to offer refreshments, he realizes it's the only other drinking vessel at hand and forces himself to act nonchalant while using it. The agent is [[HorrifyingTheHorror a bit perturbed]].
72* ''{{Literature/Wulfrik}}'': After killing Torgald the king of the Aeslings in battle, Wulfrik has his skull fashioned into a drinking cup. Later he has it fixed to the pommel of his sword. [[SkeletonsInTheCoatCloset Recycling skulls]] is something of a theme with the Norscans.
73* In the ''Literature/XWingSeries'' novel ''Iron Fist'', a reference to Skull Cups is used as a LastSecondWordSwap. Undercover as a SpacePirate, Face Loran is about to wish his comrades "May the Force be with you," but thinks better of it.
74-->'''Face:''' And may... we drink from the skulls of our enemies tonight!
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
78* ''Series/{{Farscape}}''. In "Throne for a Loss", Rygel is kidnapped for ransom by mercenaries who leave a bowl of food for him. Rygel loses his appetite on realising it's a skull. "Stop looking at me!" Then he objects when another prisoner tries to eat from his bowl seeing as he didn't want it.
79* ''Series/GameOfThrones''.
80** Karl Tanner drinks from the skull of Lord Commander Mormont, whom he killed in TheMutiny.
81** Rickon claims that Old Nan once told him that Wildlings turn the skulls of their victims into cups and make you drink your own blood from it. Apparently he hasn't noticed any [[FridgeLogic problems]] with how that's supposed to work. Osha, a former Wildling, stares at him throughout the story and then decides to {{troll}} him by saying she feels thirsty while patting him on the head.
82--->'''Osha:''' We can drink some blood while we wait. ''(rubs Rickon's hair)'' I don't need much.
83* In ''Series/HorribleHistories'', the Vikings and Pachacuti songs both mention this.
84* Near the end of the ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'' "Nazis" sketch, Hans moves for his ashtray and ''realizes'' it's skull-shaped, starts looking around and sees skulls ''everywhere'' in their fortification, including another soldier with a skull-themed mug, and with this it apparently sets in that his buddy is right about them (here, Nazis) being the "baddies".
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Music]]
88* Music/EverythingEverythingBand's "Cut UP!" provides a laconic description:
89-->Drinking from a hollow skull
90-->[[{{Understatement}} Yes, this is an awkward time]]
91[[/folder]]
92
93
94[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
95* Myth/ClassicalMythology had the Anthrophagi, a tribe of northern cannibals that were said to not only keep skulls decorated with gold, but also occasionally made drinking cups out of them. To add to the NauseaFuel, they were also said to use human scalps as napkins.
96* ''History of the Lombards'' by Paul the Deacon relates that the Lombard King Alboin, after killing the Gepid King Cunimund in battle, had Cunimund's skull turned into a drinking cup, then married Cunimund's daughter Rosamund whom he had taken captive. The marriage had already lasted several years when Alboin at a royal banquet, being somewhat tipsy, had Rosamund served wine in Cunimund's skull, inviting her to "drink merrily with her father". In revenge for this humiliation, Rosamund had her husband murdered in a palace conspiracy.
97* According to the Russian ''Primary Chronicle'', the skull of [[UsefulNotes/KievanRus Grand Prince Svyatoslav I of Kiev]] was turned into a drinking cup by the victorious Pechenegs after they had killed the Prince in an ambush at the lower Dnieper.
98* ''Literature/TheSagaOfTheVolsungs'' has a uniquely dark example, in which Gudrun serves Atli wine in goblets made from the skulls of their own sons as part of a FamilialCannibalismSurprise.
99* Myth/WaylandTheSmith is imprisoned by a king to work only for him, having his hamstrings cut to prevent escape. As part of his revenge for this and other slights, he tricks the king's sons into visiting him, kills them, and makes their skulls into ivory goblets, which he gifts to the king and queen. (And as a nice bonus, Wayland set the kids' teeth into brooches which he also gifted to the royal couple.)
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Video Games]]
103* ''VideoGame/BattleForWesnoth'': At the final scenario of ''Son of the Black-Eye'', after defeating [[spoiler:the traitor Shan-Taum]], our orcish protagonist Kapou'e decides to punish him by turning his skull into a mug.
104* ''VideoGame/CrusaderKingsII'': If you beheaded an enemy commander in a battlefield duel, you may get an event later where a soldier asks you if you really drink from the skulls of your enemies. Your character ruefully laughs it off and says something like [[RememberWhenYouBlewUpASun "I'm never living that one down, am I?"]] Eventually, the inventory system was added so you really ''can'' get a skull cup.
105* While nobody drinks out of it, you initiate battle against the titanic skeleton High Lord Wolnir in ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'' by approaching what appears to be [[https://darksouls3.wiki.fextralife.com/file/Dark-Souls-3/Cup_of_Wolnir.jpg?v=1497029898592 an ornate goblet with a skull set into it]], prompting a wave of darkness to flow out of it before you're transported to the boss arena.
106* In ''VideoGame/DeadlyPremonition'', there's an optional scene in which [[FBIAgent York]] regales his Sheriff's Department allies with the story of a case he worked on involving a perp who drank Cuba Libres out of the skulls of his victims. [[BlackComedy He does this nonchalantly over dinner.]]
107* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'': If you defeate the Arashok in single combat in Act 2, during Act 3 you can hear [=NPCs=] gossiping about rumors that you use his skull as a gravy boat.
108* In ''VideoGame/Injustice2'', one of Gorilla Grodd's intros features him drinking out of a human skull. Uniquely, he holds the skull cranium-side down and drinks out of the hole where the neck would meet the skull. [[AGlassInTheHand He also crushes it in his hand like a wineglass at the end of his intro]].
109* Suggested, though not actually displayed, from the [[MemeticMutation memetic taunt]] "I will drink from your skull!" from Sea Raiders of ''VideoGame/MountAndBlade'' in battle.
110* PlayedForLaughs in ''VideoGame/PathfinderWrathOfTheRighteous''. A sidequest in Alushinyrra has a [[HotSkittyOnWailordAction succubus and vavakia who are in a relationship of sorts]] try to remember how many mortals they've entrapped together.
111-->'''Zerieks:''' Thirty? No, I made Morevet a goblet out of the thirtieth's skull. I remember it clearly. More came after that... I think there would be enough bones to build a throne by now.
112* In ''VideoGame/{{Spelunky}}'', gathering enough favour from Kali rewards the player with a kapala with which they can collect blood to restore HitPoints.
113* In ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'', the Skull Drinking Cup is one of the artefacts that can be found through the Archaeology profession. The project's journal entry references the ''Webcomic/{{Oglaf}}'' strip:
114--> "This cup is fierce looking, but has the design flaw that liquid will keep dribbling out of the eye sockets. So thirsty..."
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:Webcomics]]
118* Parodied in ''Jägershots'', a side comic to ''Webcomic/GirlGenius''. A Jäger offers a "drink from the skull of an enemy" to Agatha, who reluctantly accepts... and gags when she finds out too late ''it wasn't cleaned out first''. The Jäger doesn't see a problem.
119* Played for laughs in the ''Webcomic/{{Oglaf}}'' strip [[http://oglaf.com/skulls/ "Skulls!"]]. A king calls for the skull of an enemy to drink from. The wine runs out of the eye holes, so the king tries to find an enemy with no eyes. He eventually kills a giant worm that fulfills the requirement, but it turn out it has no skull either.
120-->'''King:''' So... thirsty...
121* In a variant, Belkar of ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'' once turned the skull of one of the kobolds in the Linear Guild into a chip bowl. The next one became a litter box for his cat, while still alive.
122* In ''Webcomic/StickInTheMud'' they are used by the demon lord.
123* In ''Webcomic/TheWhiteboard'' one of the things Doc says he'd do to cheaters is "drink my wine from their sun-bleached skull".
124[[/folder]]
125
126[[folder:Web Original]]
127* ''Literature/HowToSurviveCamping'': The man with a skull cup carries one around, as his name implies. Drinking from it will leave one unable to eat or drink for the entire next day, but it is much preferable to what happens to those who refuse the drink.
128* Referenced in the Creator/FilmCow animation [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kRX0AQKFtwU "The Interview"]], in which one of the questions Sam gets asked is "Have you ever taken a human skull and sipped blood from it in the glorious name of Satan?"
129* ''Website/TheOnion'' deconstructs this trope in the article [[https://www.theonion.com/vanquished-foes-skull-makes-surprisingly-bad-wine-goble-1819566338 Vanquished Foe's Skull Makes Surprisingly Bad Wine Goblet]].
130* Toward the end of ''LetsPlay/AScotsmanInEgypt'', a Scottish defector tells a Timurid general the story of King Istok of Hungary and how he dealt a shocking defeat to Scotland by killing both its king and one of its best generals. The latter's mangled skull ended up a paper holder, but the Scottish king's skull was properly converted into a goblet, allowing Istok to [[IShallTauntYou taunt]] that he and their former king "drink every night in my study." A second Scottish army is dispatched by the next Scottish king both to avenge the previous defeat, and to [[DueToTheDead "Bring my brother home."]] [[spoiler:In an awesome twist, the whole account is a fiction, part of a FakeDefector's ruse to lure the Timurid horde into a Scottish trap.]]
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Western Animation]]
134* ''WesternAnimation/AsterixAndTheVikings'': The Vikings do this, and at one point Timeandahaf's wife tells him to bring back more skulls from his next raid because they're running out of cups - and if possible, find twins so they can have a matching set. The whole thing is portrayed like a HenpeckedHusband being given a shopping list.
135* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'': [[MadScientist Professor Farnsworth]] has one made out of an old Native Martian skull.
136* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': In "Fraudcast News", Kearney is seen drinking beer from a random skull he originally thought was Mr. Burns' until it was later found out he was still alive. He doesn't know whose skull it was.
137* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wakfu}}'': the [[DemonLordsAndArchDevils King of Shushus Rushu]] makes his debut in the series drinking magma from a skull, using a hollowed out spine as a straw. In a later episode, he crush the cups between his fingers to signal the beginning of the arena battle between the heroes and his minions and in a later episode still he casually threatens [[spoiler: Quilby]] by asking him if he has anything else to say before he drinks his brains from his skull using his tibia as a straw.
138[[/folder]]
139
140[[folder:Real Life]]
141* Website/TheOtherWiki has an article about these [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skull_cup here]]. They range from the classical "barbarians drinking from the skulls of their enemies" (the 5th century BC Greek historian Herodotus cites the Scythians as doing this) to Indian and Tibetan ritual goblets.
142** According to a modern legend, Blackbeard's skull ended up plated to use as a drinking cup.
143** Possibly the most famous (allegedly) historical instance of this is the story of how the skull of the [[UsefulNotes/TheByzantineEmpire Byzantine Emperor]] Nikephoros I ended up lined with silver and presented to the Bulgar Khan Krum as a drinking cup after Nikephoros was killed at the Battle of Pliska in 811. The slight problem with this is that Nikephoros was so unpopular that ''both'' sides claimed to have killed him, and none of the Byzantine chronicles were especially flattering about him.
144** Sviatoslav the Brave, a Rus-ruler got his skull turned into a cup by the Pechenegs.
145** The Lombard king Alboin, who reigned in Italy in the 6th century, purportedly had a cup made from the skull of Cunimund, a Gepid king he had defeated and killed. The legend goes that he forced Cunimund's daughter Rosamund, who he had forcibly married in the meantime, to drink from her father's skull. This strengthened Rosamund's determination to avenge her father, leading to her involvement in the coup that killed Alboin.
146** An apocryphal and most likely made-up story about UsefulNotes/OdaNobunaga is that he had the skull of his former [[HonorBeforeReason ally-turned-enemy]] Azai Nagamasa turned into a sake cup and drank from it in at least one public setting. This tale tends to become truth for [[DemonKingNobunaga fictional depictions of the character]], as seen under the anime and manga section.
147** The Mapuche people of Chile did this:
148*** Pedro de Valdivia, founder of Chile and first Royal Governor of the Spanish Crown, was defeated by the Mapuche forces led by Lautaro in the Battle of Tucapel. He was executed in captivity and his skull was kept as a trophy and eventually turned into a drinking cup.
149*** Martín García Óñez de Loyola, whom the Spanish Crown believed to be the most apt governor to finish the Arauco War, died in the Battle of Curalaba, after he and his peerage had been ambushed by Mapuche forces led by Pelantaro. His skull was also kept as a trophy and occasionally used as a drinking cup.
150[[/folder]]

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