Disciplines
History, Archaeology (20%); Philosophy, Ethics, Religion (20%); Linguistics and Literature (60%)
Keywords
Celtic Studies,
Comparative Philology,
Roman Epigraphy,
Ancient History,
History of Religions,
Germanic Philology
Abstract
The second volume of the series Fontes epigraphici religionum Celticarum antiquarum deals
with those religious inscriptions which, found in the Roman province Germania inferior, had
or might have had a Celtic linguistic background.
Its first tome scrutinizes for the first time within a rigorous linguistic framework all
the invocations contained in them. The books central section analyses systematically 35 full
theonymic strings addressing single deities together with 2 strings addressing divine pairs and
61 strings addressing groups of mother deities, called M ATRES and/or M ATRONAE, by means of
the same twenty-two parameters. Special attention is paid to the relative chronology of the
various divine names as well as to their dialectal features and their actual word formation,
always with an eye to possible contacts with other Celtic names of all kinds and even to the
panthea of the Classical antiquity, given that a linguistically Celtic invocation needs not
necessarily refer to a specific Celtic deity.
The books third section recapitulates the linguistic layers and the semantic categories
to which the divine names belong, together with the syncretistic phaenomena observed. It
also offers a typology of the Nethergermanic theonymic strings and, in its last chapter, a
linguistic study of all the personal names of dedicants and beneficiaries with an evident or
just probable Celtic background: i.e, names with a Celtic etymology as well as Latin
translation and assonance names on a possibly Celtic basis.
Methodological remarks on the study of Celtic religions phases and the classification
of divine names according to syntactic function, linguistic type, semantics, and history
constitute the two chapters of the first section, while the book is completed by a double
appendix on the Celtic speakers separation from the remaining Indo-European speakers and
on the populations splittings that originated the different Celtic dialects.