(with Celtic wheel and
thunderbolt), Le Chatelet, Gourzon,
Haute-Marne, France The Celts also worshiped a number of deities of which little more is known than
their names. Classical writers preserve a few fragments of legends or myths that may possibly be Celtic. According to the Syrian rhetorician
Lucian,
Ogmios was supposed to lead a band of men chained by their ears to his tongue as a symbol of the strength of his eloquence. The first-century Roman poet
Lucan mentions the gods
Taranis,
Teutates and
Esus, but there is little Celtic evidence that these were important deities. A number of
objets d'art, coins, and altars may depict scenes from lost myths, such as the representations of
Tarvos Trigaranus or of an equestrian ‘
Jupiter’ surmounting the
Anguiped (a snake-legged human-like figure). The
Gundestrup cauldron has also been interpreted mythically. Along with dedications giving us god names, there are also deity representations to which no name has yet been attached. Among these are images of a three-headed or three-faced god, a squatting god, a god with a snake, a god with a wheel, and a horseman with a kneeling giant. Some of these images can be found in
Late Bronze Age peat bogs in Britain, indicating the symbols were both pre-Roman and widely spread across Celtic culture. The distribution of some of the images has been mapped and shows a pattern of central concentration of an image along with a wide scatter, indicating these images were most likely attached to specific tribes and were distributed from some central point of tribal concentration outward along the lines of trade. The image of the three-headed god is centrally concentrated among the Belgae, between the Oise, Marne, and Moselle rivers. The horseman with the kneeling giant is centered on either side of the Rhine. These examples seem to indicate regional preferences for a common image stock. In this he names the five principal gods worshiped in Gaul (according to the
practice of his time, he gives the names of the closest equivalent Roman gods) and describes their roles:
Mercury was the most venerated of all the deities, and numerous representations of him were to be discovered. Mercury was seen as the originator of all the arts (and is often taken to refer to
Lugus for this reason), the supporter of adventurers and of traders, and the mightiest power concerning trade and profit. Next the Gauls revered
Apollo,
Mars,
Jupiter, and
Minerva. Among these divinities, Caesar described the Gauls as holding roughly equal views as other populations: Apollo dispels sickness, Minerva encourages skills, Jupiter governs the skies, and Mars influences warfare. MacBain argues that Apollo corresponds to
Irish Lugh, Mercury to
Manannan mac Lir, Jupiter to
the Dagda, Mars to
Neit, and Minerva to
Brigit. In addition to these five, Caesar mentions that the Gauls traced their ancestry to
a god he likened to Dis Pater (possibly Irish
Donn). ==See also==