Misplaced Pages

Camulus

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Celtic deity "Camulos" redirects here. For the populated place in Ventura County, California, see Rancho Camulos. For the character in the science fiction series Stargate SG-1, see Goa'uld characters in Stargate § Camulus.

Camulus or Camulos is a Celtic deity who was identified with Mars via interpretatio romana. Camulus was an important god of Roman Britain and Gaul, especially among the Belgae and the Remi, Gaulish tribes that originate from the areas of modern day Belgium, Luxembourg, Northern France and parts of Germany and the Netherlands.

Name

The etymology of the name is uncertain. It has been compared with the Old Irish cumall, meaning 'champion'.

Attestations

Evidence of Camulus' popularity can be seen in several place-names, notably Camulodunum.

Camulus is named in combination with Mars in inscriptions coming from Reims, Arlon, Kruishoutem, Rindern, Mainz, Bar Hill Fort near the Antonine Wall, Sarmizegetusa, and Southwark, London.

The town Camulodunum (now Colchester) in Essex may have been named after him (and is the conjectured basis for the legendary city of Camelot). Camulodunum is a Latinised form of the Brittonic Camulodūnon from Camulos plus dūnon "(hill)fort, stronghold", a reference to the town's extensive Iron Age earthwork defences.

Theories

Attempts from the 20th century and earlier to link the name Camulus with the nursery rhyme character Old King Cole, and with Irish mythological Cumhall, the hero Fionn's father, have been rejected by contemporary scholars.

References

  1. ^ "Camulus". A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Oxford University Press. 2004 .
  2. Delamarre 2003, p. 101.
  3. ILTG 351; AE 1935, 00064 honor / Martis Cam / / um Lavinat[ium
  4. CIL 13 3980 : Marti / Camulo / Lellius / Settus / v(otum) l(ibens) m(erito)
  5. AE 1992, 01244 : Deo Marti Camulo / Verecundus Fructi / v(otum) s(olvit) l(ibens) m(erito)
  6. CIL 13 8701 : Marti Camulo / sacrum pro / salute <<Tiberii>> / Claudi Caesaris / ug(usti) Germanici Imp(eratoris) / ives Remi qui / emplum constitu/erunt
  7. CIL 13 11818 : Marti / Camulo / sacrum / oni f(ilius) / d(onum) d(edit)
  8. CIL 7 1103 : Deo Mar(ti) / Camulo / ilites coh(ortis) / Hamioru / CIVSC / IVI
  9. AE 1998, 01100 : Invicto / Mithrae / Marti Camulo / Mercurio / Rosmertae / Q(uintus) Axius Aeli/anus v(ir) e(gregius) / proc(urator) Aug(ustorum) / Ioni(us)
  10. "Moritix Londiniensium: A Recent Epigraphic Find in London" (PDF). The British Epigraphy Society Newsletter (8): 10–13. Autumn 2002. Retrieved 9 July 2018 – via University College London.
  11. AE 2002, 882: Num(inibus) Augg(ustorum) / deo Marti Ca/mulo Tiberini/us Celerianus / c(ivis) Bell(ovacus) / moritix / Londiniensi/um / primus / VA[
  12. Arthur Cotterell (1997). The Encyclopedia of Mythology: Classical, Celtic, Norse. Anness Publishing Ltd.
  13. Crummy, Philip (1997). City of Victory: The story of Colchester - Britain's first Roman town. Colchester Archaeological Trust. ISBN 1 897719 04 3.
Bibliography

Further reading

  • Lindsay, Jack (1961). "Camulos and Belenos". Latomus. 20 (4): 731–43. JSTOR 41522086..
Celtic mythology series
Ancient deities of Gaul, Britain and Gallaecia by region
Supra-regional
Celtic wheel
Celtic wheel
Taranis
Taranis
Britannia
Gallia Aquitania
Gallia Belgica
Gallia Celtica
Gallia Cisalpina
Gallia Narbonensis
Germania Inferior
Gallaecia


Stub icon

This article relating to a Celtic myth or legend is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: