A bronze sculpture from the
Muri statuette group, found near
Bern in Switzerland, shows a large bear facing a woman seated in a chair, with a small tree behind the bear. The woman seems to hold fruit in her lap, perhaps feeding the bear. The sculpture has a large rectangular bronze base, which bears the inscription "Deae Artioni / Licinia Sabinilla" ("To the Goddess Artio" or "Artionis", "from Licinia Sabinilla"). If the name is Gaulish but the syntax is Latin, a dative
Artioni would give an i-stem nominative
*Artionis or an n-stem nominative
*Artio. That would perhaps correspond to a Gaulish n-stem nominative
*Artiu. Other inscriptions to the goddess have been discovered in
Daun (CIL 13, 4203),
Weilerbach (CIL 13, 4113),
Heddernheim (CIL 13, 7375 [4, p 125]), and
Stockstadt (CIL 13, 11789). == Popular culture ==