- Borvo
In classical
Celtic polytheism , Borvo (also Bormo Bormanus Bormanicus Borbanus Boruoboendua Vabusoa Labbonus Borus) was a healingdeity associated with bubbling springwater [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/rac/rac06.htm The Religion of the Ancient Celts: Chapter III. The Gods of Gaul and the Continental Celts ] ] .Centres of worship
In
Gaul , he was particularly worshipped atBourbonne-les-Bains , in the territory of theLingones , where ten inscriptions are recorded.Two other inscriptions are recorded, one (CIL 13, 02901) fromEntrains-sur-Nohain and the other (CIL 12, 02443) fromAix-en-Savoie inGallia Narbonensis . [Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL), 12: "Gallia Narbonensis".] Votive tablets inscribed ‘Borvo’ show that the offerers desired healing for themselves or others . Many of the sites where offerings to Borvo have been found are inGaul : inscriptions to him have been found inDrôme atAix-en-Diois ,Bouches-du-Rhône atAix-en-Provence ,Gers atAuch ,Savoie atAix-les-Bains ,Saône-et-Loire atBourbon-Lancy , inSavoie atAix-les-Bains ,Haute-Marne atBourbonne-les-Bains and inNièvre atEntrains [www.mythofrancaise.asso.fr/mythes/themes/divcelt2.htm] ] . However, findings have also been uncovered in theNetherlands at Utrecht, where he is called Boruoboendua Vabusoa Labbonus, and inPortugal atCaldas de Vizella and atIdanha a Velha , where he is called Borus and identified with Mars . AtAix-en-Provence , he was referred to as Borbanus and Bormanus but atCaldas de Vizella inPortugal , he was hailed as Bormanicus .Epithets
In all of his centres of worship where he is assimilated to a Roman god, Borvo was equated with
Apollo , . Many local gods were identified with Apollo in his capacity of god of healing . He bore similarities to the goddessSirona , who was also a healing deity associated with mineral springs [Paul-Marie Duval. 1957-1993. "Les dieux de la Gaule." Presses Universitaires de France / Éditions Payot. Paris.] , but he is clearly distinct from her. Variant forms of his name include Bormo and Bormanus (inGaul ) and Bormanicus (inPortugal ). The names Bormanus, Bormo and Borvo are found on inscriptions as names of river or fountain gods [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/rac/rac15.htm The Religion of the Ancient Celts: Chapter XII. River and Well Worship ] ] .Divine entourage
Borvo was frequently associated with a divine consort. Eight of the inscriptions mention the goddess
Damona . Here is an example of one of them (CIL 13, 05911)::"Deo Apol/lini Borvoni / et Damonae / C(aius) Daminius / Ferox civis / Lingonus ex / voto"
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL), 13: "Tres Galliae et Germanae".]In other areas, Borvo's partner is the goddess
Bormana . Bormana was, in some areas, worshipped independently of her male counterpart [Miranda Green. "Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend." Thames and Hudson Ltd. London. 1997] . Gods like Borvo, and others, equated with Apollo, presided over healing springs, and they are usually associated with goddesses, as their husbands or sons . He is found inDrôme atAix-en-Diois withBormana and inSaône-et-Loire atBourbon-Lancy and inHaute-Marne atBourbonne-les-Bains withDamona but he is accompanied by the ‘candid spirit’Candidus inNièvre atEntrains . In theNetherlands at Utrecht as Boruoboendua Vabusoa Lobbonus, he is found in the company of a Celtic Hercules,Macusanus andBaldruus .Etymology
The variants "Borus ~ Borvo ~ Bormo ~ Bormanus" seem to be based on a root *"boru"-. This root in turn is thought to be a variant of the
Proto-Celtic root *"beru"- ‘boil’ and may have meant ‘to bubble.’ Cognate with the names is the Welsh "berw" ‘boiling.’ and theGoidelic "bruich", ‘boil, cook’ [ [http://www.ceantar.org/Dicts/MB2/mb05.html#bruich MacBain's Dictionary - Section 5 ] ] . The words are variants of aProto-Indo-European base *"bhreue"- ‘to bubble, boil, effervesce’ (cf. Skt. "Bhurnih" ‘violent, passionate,’ Gk. "Phrear" ‘well, spring,’ L. "fervere" ‘to boil, foam,’ Thracian Gk. "Brytos" ‘fermented liquor made from barley;’ O.E. "beorma" ‘yeast;’ O.H.G. "brato" ‘roast meat’ ) from which the Englishword "brew" also derives [ [http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=brew&searchmode=none Online Etymology Dictionary ] ] . TheProto-Celtic forms of the name variants most probably were *"Boru-s", *"Borwon"-, *"Borumāno-s" and *"Borumān-iko-s" and the names most probably meant the ‘Bubbler.’ The base of these names is furthermore the source of the name of theRiver Barrow . In Irish, the river is called "Bearú", the ‘Boiling, Bubbling’ and inIrish mythology it wasDian Cecht , a great healer of theTuatha Dé Danann , who first caused the river to ‘boil’ [ [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/cml/cml09.htm Celtic Myth and] ] . *"Borvo"- is the stem Macbain reconstructs for the Irish "borbhan", ‘a purling sound,’ and which he also relates to the Welsh "berw", ‘seethe,’ French "Bourbon" and the Latin "fervo", ‘boil’ [ [http://www.ceantar.org/Dicts/MB2/mb04.html#borbhan MacBain's Dictionary - Section 4 ] ] .
References
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