| Rigisamus | |
|---|---|
Royal power, possibly war (via Mars) | |
| Other names | Rigisamos |
| Major cult center | Bourges (France), West Cocker (England) |
| Region | Gaul, Britain |
Rigisamus, also Rigisamos, was a deity in Gaulish and Celtic mythology who, according to the Interpretatio Romana, was connected with Mars.
Rigisamus is mentioned in two inscriptions, one in Bourges (Cher department, Region Center-Val de Loire in France), [1] and the other in West Cocker (in Yeovil, county of Somerset in England) [2] together with a picture of God and the following text: [3]
The name Rigisamus is derived from a reconstructed Proto-Indo-European root * rīg ("king", "royal") and a second, * -samo, * samali ("unique"). Rigisamus would therefore mean "the most royal", or "king of kings". The Irish word rí [ R'iː ] and the Gallic rix [rīg-s ] (both also mean “king”) are directly related to this.
It is unknown which properties of Mars are attributed to Rigisamus.