In Europe In Celtic iconography , commonly identified with
Cernunnos, holding a ram-horned serpent and a
torc. The ram-horned serpent was a cult image found in north-west Europe before and during the Roman period. It appears three times on the
Gundestrup cauldron, and in Romano-Celtic Gaul was closely associated with the horned or antlered god
Cernunnos, in whose company it is regularly depicted. This pairing is found as early as the fourth century BC in Northern Italy, where a huge antlered figure with
torcs and a serpent was
carved on the rocks in
Val Camonica. A bronze statuette called the
God of Étang-sur-Arroux and a stone sculpture from
Sommerécourt depict Cernunnos' body encircled by two horned snakes which feed from bowls of fruit and corn-mash balanced in the god's lap. Also at Sommerécourt is a sculpture of a goddess holding a
cornucopia and a pomegranate, with a horned serpent eating from a bowl of food. At
Yzeures-sur-Creuse a carved youth has a ram-horned snake twined around his legs, with its head at his stomach. In a
relief at a museum in
Cirencester, Gloucestershire, Cernunnos' legs are depicted as two ram-horned snakes which rear up on each side of his head and are eating fruit or corn. . According to Miranda Green, the snakes reflect the peaceful nature of the god, associated with nature and fruitfulness, and perhaps accentuate his association with regeneration. This latter characteristic is reminiscent of the
basilisk.
Greek The cerastes is a creature described in
Greek mythology as a snake with either two large
ram-like horns or four pairs of smaller horns.
Isidore of Seville described it as hunting by burying itself in sand while leaving its horns visible, and attacking creatures that came to investigate them.
In Mesopotamia In Mesopotamian mythology,
Ningishzida is sometimes depicted as a serpent with horns. In other depictions, he is shown as human but is accompanied by
bashmu,
mushussu, and
ushumgal (three horned snakes in
Akkadian mythology). Ningishzida shares the epithet,
ushumgal, "great serpent", with several other Mesopotamian gods. == In Africa ==