Moccus or Moccos is a Celtic god who is attested in one 2nd or 3rd century AD inscription from Langres, in which he is identified with the Roman god Mercury. Moccus has been connected, on etymological grounds, with pigs and boars. The boar was a potent symbol, of the hunt and of war, but also of prosperity.
Langres was a city of the Lingones, a Gallic tribe. The Lingones were perhaps devotees of Moccus. Another indication of boar worship, the Euffigneix statue of a Celtic god with boar-relief on his chest, was found in the territory of the Lingones.
The Lingones were a Gallic people whose tribal territory was centred on Andemantunnum , modern day Langres. The Lingones were granted Roman citizenship by the end the 1st century AD. [1]
The boar was a potent symbol for the Celts. In Celtic iconography, they were depicted as especially ferocious, with exaggerated dorsal bristles and elongated ears. The boar was a symbol of war. Tacitus tells us that the Aesti (a Germanic or Celtic tribe) wore boar symbols into battle. On the Celtic Gundestrup cauldron, soldiers wear boar crested helmets. The Roman Legion XX, stationed in Chester, adopted the boar as an emblem. It was also a symbol of the hunt. Celtic hunter-gods depicted with boar imagery abound. Arduinna, the goddess of the Ardennes Forest, was often represented as a huntress riding a boar. [2] [3]
The boar was also a symbol of prosperity. Boars were commonly hunted, and perhaps even sacrificed, by the Celts. Strabo tells us that the Celts liked pork and evidence from Iron Age settlements, especially elite graves, amply supports this. In supernatural feasts of Irish mythology, pigs are daily slaughtered, eaten, and then brought back to life by magic. [2] [3]
Moccus is known from a single, barely legible votive inscription from Langres. The tabula on which it was inscribed was found in the foundations of a ramp near the Grand Séminaire of Langres, in 1642 or 1645. The inscription has been dated to the late 2nd or 3rd century AD. [4] [5] The inscription reads as follows:
Latin [5] | English |
---|---|
In h(onorem) d(omus) d(ivinae) | In honour of the divine house, |
Moccus has been connected with pigs and boars on the basis of this theonym, which has been assumed to derive from a reconstructed Gaulish root word moccos, meaning pig or wild boar. [6] This word is not otherwise attested except in personal names, such as Moccius, Moccia, Mocus, Mocconius, Cato-mocus (literally, war-pig, along similar lines to the personal name Catu-mandus, war-horse). However the word is evidenced by Celtic cognates, such as Old Irish mucc (pig), Welsh moch (pigs) and Old Cornish mehin (bacon). [7] Cognates are not attested in other Indo-European branches, so the word probably entered proto-Celtic from a non-Indo-European substrate. [8]
However, not all scholars have been convinced of this etymology and of Moccus's association with boars. Joshua Whatmough suggests that the theonym derives from a place name, perhaps that of nearby Moque or Le Moche. Garrett Olmsted explains "Moccos" as a k-reflex of *makukuo-, proto-Celtic for child (and thus cognate to Irish macc and Welsh map ). [9]
Scholars such as Émile Thévenot and Philippe Jouët have connected Moccus with the Euffigneix statue (sometimes called the God of Euffigneix), a Celtic sculpture found in Euffigneix and dating to around the 1st century BC (early in the Roman occupation of Gaul). [10] [11] The statue depicts a torc-wearing figure with a large wild boar vertically over his torso. Such abstract animal imagery allows the statue to be identified as a depiction of a god. [12] Thévenot points out that Euffigneix would have lain in the tribal territory of the Lingones. [13] The Euffigneix statue has in turn been connected with the iconography on a coin of the Eburovices of Évreux, in which an upside-down boar appears on the neck of a torc-wearing human. [14] [15]
Another Celtic god associated with Mercury, the bear-god Artaius, is known from an inscription in Beaucroissant, Isère. Celticist Miranda Green suggests both were gods associated with hunting, perhaps protectors of those who hunted their respective animals. [16]
James MacKillop suggests that Moccus is connected with the Gaulish Mercury, a figure attested in Roman sources and usually identified with the Celtic god Lugus. [17] Jouët connects Moccus with the Irish myth in Oidheadh Chlainne Tuireann , in which Lugh (Irish Lugus) obtains the pig-skin of Tuis, which could heal any injury. [18] Gwenaël Le Duc has suggested that both this inscription and the Euffigneix statue attest to Lugus. [19]
Moccus is worshipped in modern times by groups of Druids, Wiccans [20] and Celtic polytheists. He is one of the main temple gods worshiped by members of the Shrine of the Irish Oak, who have assigned his feast day to the winter solstice due to his aspects as a protector, sun god, and giver of plenty. [21]
In ancient Celtic and Gallo-Roman religion, Cernunnos or Carnonos is a god depicted with antlers, seated cross-legged, and is associated with stags, horned serpents, dogs and bulls. He is usually shown holding or wearing a torc and sometimes holding a bag of coins and a cornucopia. He is believed to have originally been a Proto-Celtic God. There are more than fifty depictions and inscriptions referring to him, mainly in the north-eastern region of Gaul.
Mercury is a major god in Roman religion and mythology, being one of the 12 Dii Consentes within the ancient Roman pantheon. He is the god of financial gain, commerce, eloquence, messages, communication, travelers, boundaries, luck, trickery, and thieves; he also serves as the guide of souls to the underworld and the "messenger of the gods".
Erecura or Aerecura was a goddess worshipped in ancient times, often thought to be Celtic in origin, mostly represented with the attributes of Proserpina and associated with the Roman underworld god Dis Pater, as on an altar from Sulzbach. She appears with Dis Pater in a statue found at Oberseebach, Switzerland, and in several magical texts from Austria, once in the company of Cerberus and once probably with Ogmios. A further inscription to her has been found near Stuttgart, Germany. Besides her chthonic symbols, she is often depicted with such attributes of fertility as the cornucopia and apple baskets. She is believed to be similar to Greek Hecate, while the two goddesses share similar names. She is depicted in a seated posture, wearing a full robe and bearing trays or baskets of fruit, in depictions from Cannstatt and Sulzbach. Miranda Green calls Aericura a "Gaulish Hecuba", while Noémie Beck characterizes her as a "land-goddess" sharing both underworld and fertility aspects with Dis Pater.
Alisanos was a local Gallo-Roman god worshipped in what is now the Côte-d'Or in Burgundy and at Aix-en-Provence.
In Gallo-Roman religion, Arduinna was the eponymous tutelary goddess of the Ardennes Forest and region, thought to be represented as a huntress riding a boar. Her cult originated in the Ardennes region of present-day Belgium, Luxembourg, and France. She was identified with the Roman goddess Diana.
Borvo or Bormo was an ancient Celtic god of healing springs worshipped in Gaul and Gallaecia. He was sometimes identified with the Graeco-Roman god Apollo, although his cult had preserved a high degree of autonomy during the Roman period.
Ogmios was the Celtic deity of eloquence. He is described as resembling a more elderly version of Heracles, and uses his powers of persuasion to bind men to himself, with stories describing thin, long chains connecting his tongue to the ears of his followers.
Esus, Esos, Hesus, or Aisus was a Celtic god who was worshipped primarily in ancient Gaul and Britain. He is known from two monumental statues and a line in Lucan's Bellum civile.
Lugus is a Celtic god whose worship is attested in the epigraphic record. His nature is uncertain and no depictions of him are known. Lugus perhaps also appears in Roman sources and medieval Insular mythology.
In Celtic mythology, Nantosuelta is the goddess of nature, the earth, fire, and fertility
In Celtic mythology, Taranis is the god of thunder, who was worshipped primarily in Gaul and Hispania but also in the Rhineland and Danube regions, amongst others. Taranis, along with Esus and Toutatis, was mentioned by the Roman poet Lucan in his epic poem Pharsalia as a Celtic deity to whom human sacrificial offerings were made. Taranis was associated, as was the Cyclops Brontes ("thunder") in Greek mythology, with the wheel.
The Lingones were a Gallic tribe of the Iron Age and Roman periods. They dwelled in the region surrounding the present-day city of Langres, between the provinces of Gallia Lugdunensis and Gallia Belgica.
Ancient Celtic religion, commonly known as Celtic paganism, was the religion of the ancient Celtic peoples of Europe. Because there are no extant native records of their beliefs, evidence about their religion is gleaned from archaeology, Greco-Roman accounts, and literature from the early Christian period. Celtic paganism was one of a larger group of polytheistic Indo-European religions of Iron Age Europe.
The gods and goddesses of the pre-Christian Celtic peoples are known from a variety of sources, including ancient places of worship, statues, engravings, cult objects, and place or personal names. The ancient Celts appear to have had a pantheon of deities comparable to others in Indo-European religion, each linked to aspects of life and the natural world. Epona was an exception and retained without association with any Roman deity. By a process of syncretism, after the Roman conquest of Celtic areas, most of these became associated with their Roman equivalents, and their worship continued until Christianization. Pre-Roman Celtic art produced few images of deities, and these are hard to identify, lacking inscriptions, but in the post-conquest period many more images were made, some with inscriptions naming the deity. Most of the specific information we have therefore comes from Latin writers and the archaeology of the post-conquest period. More tentatively, links can be made between ancient Celtic deities and figures in early medieval Irish and Welsh literature, although all these works were produced well after Christianization.
The Leucī were a Belgic tribe dwelling in the southern part of the modern Lorraine region during the Iron Age and the Roman period.
Celtic mythology is the body of myths belonging to the Celtic peoples. Like other Iron Age Europeans, Celtic peoples followed a polytheistic religion, having many gods and goddesses. The mythologies of continental Celtic peoples, such as the Gauls and Celtiberians, did not survive their conquest by the Roman Empire, the loss of their Celtic languages and their subsequent conversion to Christianity. Only remnants are found in Greco-Roman sources and archaeology. Most surviving Celtic mythology belongs to the Insular Celtic peoples. They preserved some of their myths in oral lore, which were eventually written down by Christian scribes in the Middle Ages. Irish mythology has the largest written body of myths, followed by Welsh mythology.
Gaulish is an extinct Celtic language spoken in parts of Continental Europe before and during the period of the Roman Empire. In the narrow sense, Gaulish was the language of the Celts of Gaul. In a wider sense, it also comprises varieties of Celtic that were spoken across much of central Europe ("Noric"), parts of the Balkans, and Anatolia ("Galatian"), which are thought to have been closely related. The more divergent Lepontic of Northern Italy has also sometimes been subsumed under Gaulish.
The Chamalières tablet is a lead tablet, six by four centimeters, that was discovered in 1971 in Chamalières, France, at the Source des Roches excavation. The tablet is dated somewhere between 50 BC and 50 AD. The text is written in the Gaulish language, with cursive Latin letters. With 396 letters grouped in 47 words, it is the third-longest extant text in Gaulish, giving it great importance in the study of this language.
The Euffigneix statue or God of Euffigneix is a Celtic stone pillar statue found near Euffigneix, a commune of Haute-Marne, France. The statue has been dated to the 1st century BC, within the Gallo-Roman period. The statue is a human bust with a large relief of a boar on its chest. The boar was a potent symbol for the Celts and the figure has been thought to represent a Gaulish boar-god, perhaps Moccus.