Five places named
Segedunum are known to have existed in the Roman empire, one each in Britain and Germany and three in
Gaul. The name
Segedunum is known from the
Notitia Dignitatum of the 4th century, but there is no consensus on its meaning. The various conjectures include "derived from the Celtic for 'powerful' or 'victorious'", "derived from the [Celtic] words
sego ('strength') and
dunum ('fortified place')", "Romano-British
Segedunum 'Strong-fort'", and "Celtic
sechdun or 'dry hill'". The first element of the name is attested widely in Gaul, Spain, Germany and Italy, and derives from the
Indo-European root segh-, which is reflected in various later European languages with similar meanings:
Irish seg-,
segh- 'strength, vigour',
Welsh hy 'daring, bold',
German Sieg 'victory', and so on. As applied to place names, it appears to have had the meaning of "place of strength" or "place of victory". The second element,
-dunum, is a Celtic term widely attested across Britain and Gaul and typically meant a fort. Thus
Segedunum probably had the meaning of "strong fort" or "victory fort". ==History==