- Catubodua
Catubodua ("battle-
crow ") is aGaulish goddess known from a single inscription inHaute Savoie , easternFrance . She appears to be identical to the Irish goddess, theBadb . Nicole Jufer and Thierry Luginbühl provisionally link Catubodua with other apparently martial goddesses attested elsewhere, such as Boudina, Bodua, and Boudiga, whose names share roots meaning either 'fighting' or 'victory'. [Jufer, N. and T. Luginbühl (2001). "Répertoire des dieux gaulois." Paris, Editions Errance.] She would therefore be comparable to the Roman Victoria and the Greek goddess Nike and possibly the Nordic goddessSigyn .A related Roman legend?
A story of the Roman wars against the Gauls of the
4th century BC , recorded byLivy ,Aulus Gellius andDionysius of Halicarnassus , may preserve a reference to her. A Roman soldier, Marcus Valerius, accepted a challenge to single combat with a Gaulish champion. When the fight began, a crow landed on Valerius's helmet and began to attack the Gaul, who, terrified by this divine intervention, was easily beaten. Valerius adopted thecognomen "Corvus" (crow), and asMarcus Valerius Corvus went on to be a famous general and politician of theRoman Republic . [Titus Livius. [http://www.livius.org/li-ln/livy/periochae/periochae006.html "Periochae."] Book 7:10.]Name and etymology
In the Gaulish language, the name Catubodua is believed to mean "battle-crow". [Georges Dottin (1918) "La Langue Gauloise, Grammaire, Textes et Glossaire." Paris Librairie C. Klincksieck. p. 235 and 244] [ [http://www.arbre-celtique.com/encyclopedie/cathubodua-4076.htm arbre-celtique] ]
Etymological lexical forms reconstructed in the
University of Wales 'Proto-Celtic lexicon, suggest that the name is likely to be ultimately derived from the Proto-Celtic *"Katu-bodwā", a word that could be interpreted as ‘battle-fighting’. [ [http://www.wales.ac.uk/documents/external/cawcs/pcl-moe.pdf Proto-Celtic—English lexicon] .University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies. (See also [http://www.wales.ac.uk/newpages/EXTERNAL/E4504.asp this page] for background and disclaimers.)] Nonetheless it is this second element *"bodwā" which appears to be the Proto-Celtic root of the later form of the nameBadhbh .Fact|date=February 2007 The masculine form *"bodwos" ('fighting') developed in Gaelic into Bodb.Fact|date=February 2007References
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