- Icovellauna
Icovellauna was a Celtic goddess worshipped in
Gaul . Her places of worship included a temple inMetz , originally built over a spring; [Dyfed Lloyd Evans (2005). " [http://www.celtnet.org.uk/gods_i/icovellauna.html Icovellauna: a Gaulish Goddess (Divine Pourer of the Waters)] " from [http://www.celtnet.org.uk/ www.celtnet.org.uk] , accessed 10 September 2006.] a cult centre in Malzéville, from which five inscriptions dedicated to her have been recovered; andTrier .Nicole Jufer & Thierry Luginbühl (2001). "Les dieux gaulois : répertoire des noms de divinités celtiques connus par l'épigraphie, les textes antiques et la toponymie." Editions Errance, Paris. ISBN 2-87772-200-7. p.45; pp.50,70.] All of these places lie in the valley of the Moselle or Meurthe rivers of eastern Gaul, in what are now Lorraine inFrance andRhineland-Palatinate inGermany .Miranda Green interprets the Gaulish root "ico-" as 'water' and characterizes Icovellauna as a "water-goddess" who "presided over the nymphaeum at Sablon in the Moselle Basin, a thermal spring-site". [Miranda Green (1986). "The Gods of the Celts." Alan Sutton, Gloucs. ISBN 0-389-20672-5. pp.85, 165.] The root "uellauno-" is glossed by Pierre-Henri Billy as "bon" (good); [Pierre-Henri Billy. 1993. "Thesaurus linguae Gallicae". Olms-Weidmann. ISBN 3-487-09746-X. p.189.] the same root is also found in the names of a godVellaunus , worshipped inCaerwent ,Wales , and of "Mercurius Victor Ma [g] niacus Ve [l] launus" worshipped in Hières-sur-Amby,France .__NOTOC__Etymology
The etymology of Icovellauna is uncertain, though the component Ico- represents one of the
Gaulish words for 'water' and the 'vellauna/vellaunos' is found in the name of theBrythonic deity Vellaunos and in the name of the hero Cassivellaunos who later became the Cymric heroCaswallon . Now, the terminal -una/-unus generally stands for a divinity which leaves us with the interpretation of -vella-. Assuming that this word retained its meaning in the later Cymric form of Caswallon then this gives us a Cymric word similar to gwall (taking mutation into account) which may in turn be derived from the archaic Cymric form gwallaw which has the double meaning of — 'to pour' or 'to serve'. The latter meaning makes more sense for deities such as Vellaunus; however, in the case of Icovellauna the former meaning seems to make more sens and fits-in well with the nature of a waterdeity . Thus Icovellauna's name can be interpreted as 'Divine Pourer of the Waters' (or perhaps more poetically 'Divine Source of the Waters'), an apposite name for agoddess associated with the healing springs of Sablon.References
Works cited
Further reading
* J-M. Demarolle. "Les eaux et le sacré dans la Lorraine antique". In "L'eau en Gaule, rites sacrés et thermalisme". Dossiers d'Archéologie n° 174, 1 September 1992.
External links
* [http://m.grandveaux.free.fr/DCSablon/index.php?2005/12/26/3-la-dea-icovellauna Le Sablon - du village à la ville] . Includes a line drawing of Icovellauna's sacred well in Metz.
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