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Belenus

Belenus (Gaulish: Belenos, Belinos) is an ancient Celtic healing god. The cult of Belenus stretched from the Italian Peninsula to the British Isles, with a main sanctuary located at Aquileia, on the Adriatic coast. Through interpretatio romana, Belenus was often identified with Apollo, although his cult seems to have preserved a certain degree of autonomy during the Roman period.[1][2]

Name edit

Attestations edit

The theonym Belenus (or Belinus), which is a latinized form of the Gaulish Belenos (or Belinos), appears in some 51 inscriptions. Although most of them are located in Aquileia (Friuli, Italy), the main centre of his cult, the name has also been found in places where Celtic speakers lived in ancient times, including in Gaul, Noricum, Illyria, Britain and Ireland.[3]

Linguist Blanca María Prósper argues that Belinos was probably the original form,[4] which also appears in the name Belyn [cy] (from an earlier Belinos), a Welsh leader who died in 627 AD.[3] Known variants include Bellinus and perhaps Belus.[5] The deity may also have been known in Ireland and Britain by the variants Bel, Beli, and Bile.[6]

Etymology edit

The etymology of Belenos remains unclear. It has been traditionally translated as the 'bright one' or the 'shining one', by deriving the name from a Proto-Indo-European root *bʰelH-, interpreted as 'white, shining' (cf. Lith. báltas 'white', Grk φαλός phalós 'white', Arm. bal 'pallor', Goth. bala 'grey'). This theory was encouraged by the interpretatio romana of Belenos as the 'Gaulish Apollo', a divinity with sun attributes.[7][8]

However, this etymology has come under increasing criticism in recent scholarship. Xavier Delamarre notes that the proposed cognates stemming from *bʰelH- do not seem to connote 'shining', but rather '[pale] white' or 'grey', and suggests that Belenos may rather derive from the Gaulish stem belo- ('strong, powerful') attached to the suffix -nos ('lord, master'), which would lead to Belenos as the 'Master of Power'.[8] Alternatively, Peter Schrijver has proposed that Belenos might be an o-stem of the Indo-European root *bʰel-, designating the henbane (cf. Welsh bela, Germanic *bel(u)nōn, Slavic *bъlnъ), a psychoactive plant which was known as belenuntia in Gaulish and as apollinaris in Latin.[9] Bernhard Maier and Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel have also argued that the name may derive from a root *gwelH-, meaning 'source, spring'.[10][11] According to Šašel Kos, Belenus' "close association with water is confirmed by two dedications to Fons B(eleni) and by an altar in which Belenus is worshipped together with the Nymphs. Thermal springs are also attested to at Iulium Carnicum."[12] The 19th-century attempt to link the root bel- with the Phoenician deity Baal is now widely rejected by modern scholars.[5]

Related terms edit

A village that is now part of the municipality of Aquileia is still named Beligna.[3] A tribal leader of pre-Roman Britain was named Cunobelinos (Old Welsh Conbelin), which possibly means 'hound of Belenos', or else 'strong as a dog' if the name is not theophoric.[13][5][14] The Old Welsh personal name Liuelin (modern Llywelyn) goes back to a similar compound *lugu-belinos (either a dvandva with the names of two deities, or else 'strong as Lugus').[14] The Brittonic variant of the name could be the source of the Billingsgate ward in London, although this may be a folk etymology, and possibly of the fountain of Belenton (now Bérenton) in the Brocéliande forest in Brittany.[6][5] The names of the Welsh and Irish ancestor-figures Beli Mawr and Bile may also be related.[5][15]

The Gaulish term belenuntia (Βελενούντιαν), designating the henbane, a hallucinogenic plant also known in Latin as apollinaris, may be a derivative form of Belenos.[16][17] The variant belenion, cited as a poisonous plant by Pseudo-Aristotle, appears to be the source of the Spanish beleño ('henbane').[17] The Gallo-Roman term belisa could also have been borrowed into Old High German as bilisa (cf. modern German Bilsenkraut 'henbane').[3] Henbane was commonly used in antiquity for medicinal purposes, providing further evidence of Belanos' healing attributes.[18] A shallow stone dish found in Saint-Chamas (south of France) and dedicated to Beleino could thus have been used to hold hallucinogenic substances.[3]

According to Delamarre, the name of the goddess Belisama appears to be built on a same stem bel(o)- ('strong, powerful') attached to the intensifying suffix -isama, and could thus been translated as 'Very Powerful'.[8] Schrijver rather links it to a stem for 'henbane', *beles-, attached to an unknown suffix -ma, and compares the name with the Gaulish theonym Belisa-maros.[19] The personal name Bellovesus can probably be translated as 'Worthy of Power', from bello- ('power') attached to uesus ('worthy, good, deserving').[8]

Spanish scholarship also relates the deity's name to Aquitanian anthroponym Belinatepos or Belanetepos (taken to have an equine association), as well as the toponyms Beleño and Beloño.[20][21]

Epithets edit

In ancient Gaul and Britain, Apollo was commonly associated with the sun and healing attributes.[22] He may have been equated with fifteen or more different names and epithets (including Belenus, Vindonnus, Grannos, Borvo, Maponus, Moritasgus, among others).[22][23]

The god was venerated as Apollo Belenus at the curative shrine of Sainte-Sabine (Burgundy), where he was invoked by pilgrims seeking cures for their sickness. If Belenus is interpreted as meaning 'shining, brilliant', it can be compared to the Celtic epithet Vindonnus (from *windo- 'white'), attached to Apollo as a deity who restored light and vision to people with eye disease at Essarois (Burgundy).[22]

Historical cult edit

Origin edit

According to philologist Helmut Birkhan, Belenus was seen as a "typical Karnian oracle- and health-giving deity", although its widespread attestation among ancient Celtic peoples may point to a Common Celtic origin of the cult.[3] Scholar Miranda Aldhouse-Green writes that the deity probably pre-existed the Roman period.[22] Philologist Marjeta Šašel Kos thinks that the worship of Belenus spread from Noricum towards the nearby towns of Aquileia and Iulium Carnicum (modern Zuglio).[12]

Locations edit

Tertullian, writing in c. 200 AD, identifies Belenus as the national god of Noricum. Inscriptions dedicated to Belenus are concentrated in the Eastern Alps and Gallia Cisalpina, but there is evidence that the popularity of the god became more widespread in the Roman period.[24]

Around 240, Herodian mentions Belenus' worship in Aquileia, where he was regarded as its patron god.[22][12] During the siege of the city in 238 AD by emperor Maximinus Thrax, who died during the event while his army was defeated soon afterwards, Belenus was invoked as the divine protector of Aquileia.[12] The soldiers reported seeing an appearance of the god floating in the air, battling and defending his town, in an evocation of Apollo's defence of Delphi against the troops of Brennos.[3] Dedications to a Fons Beleni ('Fountain of Belenos') show connection with medicinal springs.[25] The third-century emperors Diocletian and Maximian each dedicated an inscription to Belenus in the region of Aquileia. A further 6 votive inscriptions of Belenus were discovered at Altinum, Concordia and Iulium Carnicum.[24]

 
Bowl dedicated to Belenus (Marseille History Museum).

Belenus was an important god of Iulium Carnicum (modern Zuglio), a town close to the border with Noricum inhabited by the Carni. A sanctuary dedicated to the deity is attested by the second half of the 1st century BC, when its renovation was commemorated by two chiefs of the village.[12] Epigraphic dedications to the god are also known in Venice and at Rimini.[22] An altar was also found in Celeia (modern Celje), one of the most important Norican towns. The cult may have been introduced here from Aquileia, as suggested by the name of its dedicator, Lucius Sentius Forensis, the Sentii being well attested to at Aquileia, but not in Noricum.[26]

Ausonius (later 4th century AD) alludes to sanctuaries dedicated to Belenus in Aquitania, and mentions a temple priest of the cult named Phoebicius. The deity was also popular in Provence, as attested by inscriptions from the Marseille and Nîmes areas.[22] A votive inscription from Caesarean times by the poet Lucius Erax Bardus was found at Rochemolles, near Bardonecchia (Bardonnèche), in Italy (Alpi Graie).[3] At Aquae Borvonis (Bourbon-Lancy), the Aedui worshipped Belenus in association with health giving waters.[27]

Consort edit

Images of Belenus sometimes show him to be accompanied by a female, perhaps the Gaulish deity Belisama.[28] The river name Bienne (Biena in 1337 AD), present-day eastern France, and the place name Bienne (apud Belnam in 1142 AD), modern Switzerland, also attest to the existence of a feminine form *Belenā.[8]

In Noricum, Belenus may also have been accompanied by an otherwise unknown female deity named Belestis (or Beléna, Beléstis Augústa, Beléstris, Belínca), possibly worshipped as a goddess of nature and fertility.[29][12] Two shrines dedicated to the goddess were found in Podljubelj in the Karawanks.[29]

Related beliefs edit

Medieval Ireland edit

The Irish Bel has been speculated by some scholars to be linked to the god Belenus.[6] Fires in honor of the deity were lit for Celtic festivals of Beltaine ('Bel's Fires') on May 1.[30] On occasion, cattle was driven between two fires in order to repeal diseases, which Schrijver has compared to the traditional German custom of burning henbane collected on Midsummer to protect the cattle against diseases and witchcraft.[31]

Modern Slovenia edit

The Slovenian divinity Belin, attested in the 19th century by historian Simon Rutar, may provide evidence of the survival of Belenus' cult in the region and of its later integration into Slovenian beliefs, possibly blended with attributes of the Slavic god Belibog.[32][4] The local population regarded him as a great healer who could cure blindness with his 'key'.[33] Professor Monika Kropej also states that Belenus was possibly incorporated into the Slovenian lore as the beliči, a type of fairy-like beings.[29] An incised stone in southwestern Slovenia, called berlina by the local population, among other names, may also be related. It is connected to ancient rituals and features two primitively carved figures with heads ornamented with rays.[4]

Legacy edit

Science edit

The minor planet 11284 Belenus is named after him.[34]

Popular culture edit

The Gauls of the Asterix franchise often swear by "Belenos" and "Toutatis."[35]

References edit

  1. ^ Schrijver 1999, p. 24: "Apart from the association with the Roman Apollo, little is known about the function and significance of Belenos (Pauly Wissowa s. v. Belenus). He is probably associated with medicine."
  2. ^ Birkhan 2006, p. 195: "Celtic deity whose name is often connected with the Graeco-Roman god Apollo (see interpretatio romana), although the cult of Belenos seems to have preserved a degree of independence ... Belenus was often identified with Apollo and seen as a typical Karnian oracle- and health-giving deity."
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Birkhan 2006, p. 195.
  4. ^ a b c Prósper 2017, p. 258.
  5. ^ a b c d e MacKillop 2004, s.v. Belenus.
  6. ^ a b c Leeming 2005, p. 48.
  7. ^ Schrijver 1999, pp. 24–25.
  8. ^ a b c d e Delamarre 2003, p. 72.
  9. ^ Schrijver 1999, pp. 24–27.
  10. ^ Maier 1994, p. 40.
  11. ^ de Bernardo Stempel, Patrizia; Hainzmann, Manfred; Mathieu, Nicolas (2013), de Bernardo Stempel, Patrizia; Hofeneder, Andreas (eds.), "Celtic and Other Indigenous Divine Names Found in the Italian Peninsula", Théonymie celtique, cultes, interpretatio - Keltische Theonymie, Kulte, Interpretatio (1 ed.), Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, p. 79, ISBN 978-3-7001-7369-4, JSTOR j.ctv8mdn28.8
  12. ^ a b c d e f Šašel Kos 2022, p. 228.
  13. ^ Schrijver 1999, p. 27–28.
  14. ^ a b Prósper 2017, p. 262.
  15. ^ Schrijver 1999, pp. 30–34, 39–40.
  16. ^ Schrijver 1999, p. 27.
  17. ^ a b Delamarre 2003, p. 71.
  18. ^ Schrijver 1999, p. 26.
  19. ^ Schrijver 1999, pp. 30–31.
  20. ^ de Aspuru, José Ignacio San Vicente González (2008). "El jinete desnudo y la silla de montar de la estela de Iruña (Alava)". Hispania Antiqua (32): 75, 78. ISSN 1130-0515.
  21. ^ Gricourt, Daniel; Dominique, Hollard (2002). "Lugus et le cheval". Dialogues d'histoire ancienne. 28 (2): 136. doi:10.3406/dha.2002.2475.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g Aldhouse-Green 1997, pp. 30–31.
  23. ^ Nicole Jufer & Thierry Luginbühl (2001). Les dieux gaulois : répertoire des noms de divinités celtiques connus par l'épigraphie, les textes antiques et la toponymie. Paris: Editions Errance. ISBN 2-87772-200-7.
  24. ^ a b Maier, Bernhard (2012). Geschichte und Kultur der Kelten. C.H.Beck.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  25. ^ Schrijver 1999, p. 24.
  26. ^ Šašel Kos 2022, p. 229.
  27. ^ MacKillop 2004, s.v. Belenus.
  28. ^ Koch, John T. (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, Inc. ISBN 1-85109-440-7.
  29. ^ a b c Kropej 2012, p. 217.
  30. ^ MacKillop 2004, s.v. Belenus.
  31. ^ Schrijver 1999, pp. 34–35.
  32. ^ Šašel Kos 2001, p. 14.
  33. ^ Šašel Kos 2001, p. 9.
  34. ^ "Small-Body Database Lookup". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  35. ^ Gravil, Richard (2003), Gravil, Richard (ed.), "Among the Men of Old", Wordsworth’s Bardic Vocation, 1787–1842, Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 11–32, doi:10.1057/9780230510333_2, ISBN 978-0-230-51033-3

Bibliography edit

belenus, asteroid, 11284, belenos, redirects, here, rugby, club, belenos, star, 8574, gaulish, belenos, belinos, ancient, celtic, healing, cult, stretched, from, italian, peninsula, british, isles, with, main, sanctuary, located, aquileia, adriatic, coast, thr. For the asteroid see 11284 Belenus Belenos redirects here For the rugby club see Belenos RC For the star see HD 8574 Belenus Gaulish Belenos Belinos is an ancient Celtic healing god The cult of Belenus stretched from the Italian Peninsula to the British Isles with a main sanctuary located at Aquileia on the Adriatic coast Through interpretatio romana Belenus was often identified with Apollo although his cult seems to have preserved a certain degree of autonomy during the Roman period 1 2 Contents 1 Name 1 1 Attestations 1 2 Etymology 1 3 Related terms 1 4 Epithets 2 Historical cult 2 1 Origin 2 2 Locations 2 3 Consort 3 Related beliefs 3 1 Medieval Ireland 3 2 Modern Slovenia 4 Legacy 4 1 Science 4 2 Popular culture 5 References 5 1 BibliographyName editAttestations edit The theonym Belenus or Belinus which is a latinized form of the Gaulish Belenos or Belinos appears in some 51 inscriptions Although most of them are located in Aquileia Friuli Italy the main centre of his cult the name has also been found in places where Celtic speakers lived in ancient times including in Gaul Noricum Illyria Britain and Ireland 3 Linguist Blanca Maria Prosper argues that Belinos was probably the original form 4 which also appears in the name Belyn cy from an earlier Belinos a Welsh leader who died in 627 AD 3 Known variants include Bellinus and perhaps Belus 5 The deity may also have been known in Ireland and Britain by the variants Bel Beli and Bile 6 Etymology edit nbsp Look up Belenus in Wiktionary the free dictionary The etymology of Belenos remains unclear It has been traditionally translated as the bright one or the shining one by deriving the name from a Proto Indo European root bʰelH interpreted as white shining cf Lith baltas white Grk falos phalos white Arm bal pallor Goth bala grey This theory was encouraged by the interpretatio romana of Belenos as the Gaulish Apollo a divinity with sun attributes 7 8 However this etymology has come under increasing criticism in recent scholarship Xavier Delamarre notes that the proposed cognates stemming from bʰelH do not seem to connote shining but rather pale white or grey and suggests that Belenos may rather derive from the Gaulish stem belo strong powerful attached to the suffix nos lord master which would lead to Belenos as the Master of Power 8 Alternatively Peter Schrijver has proposed that Belenos might be an o stem of the Indo European root bʰel designating the henbane cf Welsh bela Germanic bel u nōn Slavic bln a psychoactive plant which was known as belenuntia in Gaulish and as apollinaris in Latin 9 Bernhard Maier and Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel have also argued that the name may derive from a root gwelH meaning source spring 10 11 According to Sasel Kos Belenus close association with water is confirmed by two dedications to Fons B eleni and by an altar in which Belenus is worshipped together with the Nymphs Thermal springs are also attested to at Iulium Carnicum 12 The 19th century attempt to link the root bel with the Phoenician deity Baal is now widely rejected by modern scholars 5 Related terms edit A village that is now part of the municipality of Aquileia is still named Beligna 3 A tribal leader of pre Roman Britain was named Cunobelinos Old Welsh Conbelin which possibly means hound of Belenos or else strong as a dog if the name is not theophoric 13 5 14 The Old Welsh personal name Liuelin modern Llywelyn goes back to a similar compound lugu belinos either a dvandva with the names of two deities or else strong as Lugus 14 The Brittonic variant of the name could be the source of the Billingsgate ward in London although this may be a folk etymology and possibly of the fountain of Belenton now Berenton in the Broceliande forest in Brittany 6 5 The names of the Welsh and Irish ancestor figures Beli Mawr and Bile may also be related 5 15 The Gaulish term belenuntia Belenoyntian designating the henbane a hallucinogenic plant also known in Latin as apollinaris may be a derivative form of Belenos 16 17 The variant belenion cited as a poisonous plant by Pseudo Aristotle appears to be the source of the Spanish beleno henbane 17 The Gallo Roman term belisa could also have been borrowed into Old High German as bilisa cf modern German Bilsenkraut henbane 3 Henbane was commonly used in antiquity for medicinal purposes providing further evidence of Belanos healing attributes 18 A shallow stone dish found in Saint Chamas south of France and dedicated to Beleino could thus have been used to hold hallucinogenic substances 3 According to Delamarre the name of the goddess Belisama appears to be built on a same stem bel o strong powerful attached to the intensifying suffix isama and could thus been translated as Very Powerful 8 Schrijver rather links it to a stem for henbane beles attached to an unknown suffix ma and compares the name with the Gaulish theonym Belisa maros 19 The personal name Bellovesus can probably be translated as Worthy of Power from bello power attached to uesus worthy good deserving 8 Spanish scholarship also relates the deity s name to Aquitanian anthroponym Belinatepos or Belanetepos taken to have an equine association as well as the toponyms Beleno and Belono 20 21 Epithets edit In ancient Gaul and Britain Apollo was commonly associated with the sun and healing attributes 22 He may have been equated with fifteen or more different names and epithets including Belenus Vindonnus Grannos Borvo Maponus Moritasgus among others 22 23 The god was venerated as Apollo Belenus at the curative shrine of Sainte Sabine Burgundy where he was invoked by pilgrims seeking cures for their sickness If Belenus is interpreted as meaning shining brilliant it can be compared to the Celtic epithet Vindonnus from windo white attached to Apollo as a deity who restored light and vision to people with eye disease at Essarois Burgundy 22 Historical cult editOrigin edit According to philologist Helmut Birkhan Belenus was seen as a typical Karnian oracle and health giving deity although its widespread attestation among ancient Celtic peoples may point to a Common Celtic origin of the cult 3 Scholar Miranda Aldhouse Green writes that the deity probably pre existed the Roman period 22 Philologist Marjeta Sasel Kos thinks that the worship of Belenus spread from Noricum towards the nearby towns of Aquileia and Iulium Carnicum modern Zuglio 12 Locations edit Tertullian writing in c 200 AD identifies Belenus as the national god of Noricum Inscriptions dedicated to Belenus are concentrated in the Eastern Alps and Gallia Cisalpina but there is evidence that the popularity of the god became more widespread in the Roman period 24 Around 240 Herodian mentions Belenus worship in Aquileia where he was regarded as its patron god 22 12 During the siege of the city in 238 AD by emperor Maximinus Thrax who died during the event while his army was defeated soon afterwards Belenus was invoked as the divine protector of Aquileia 12 The soldiers reported seeing an appearance of the god floating in the air battling and defending his town in an evocation of Apollo s defence of Delphi against the troops of Brennos 3 Dedications to a Fons Beleni Fountain of Belenos show connection with medicinal springs 25 The third century emperors Diocletian and Maximian each dedicated an inscription to Belenus in the region of Aquileia A further 6 votive inscriptions of Belenus were discovered at Altinum Concordia and Iulium Carnicum 24 nbsp Bowl dedicated to Belenus Marseille History Museum Belenus was an important god of Iulium Carnicum modern Zuglio a town close to the border with Noricum inhabited by the Carni A sanctuary dedicated to the deity is attested by the second half of the 1st century BC when its renovation was commemorated by two chiefs of the village 12 Epigraphic dedications to the god are also known in Venice and at Rimini 22 An altar was also found in Celeia modern Celje one of the most important Norican towns The cult may have been introduced here from Aquileia as suggested by the name of its dedicator Lucius Sentius Forensis the Sentii being well attested to at Aquileia but not in Noricum 26 Ausonius later 4th century AD alludes to sanctuaries dedicated to Belenus in Aquitania and mentions a temple priest of the cult named Phoebicius The deity was also popular in Provence as attested by inscriptions from the Marseille and Nimes areas 22 A votive inscription from Caesarean times by the poet Lucius Erax Bardus was found at Rochemolles near Bardonecchia Bardonneche in Italy Alpi Graie 3 At Aquae Borvonis Bourbon Lancy the Aedui worshipped Belenus in association with health giving waters 27 Consort edit Images of Belenus sometimes show him to be accompanied by a female perhaps the Gaulish deity Belisama 28 The river name Bienne Biena in 1337 AD present day eastern France and the place name Bienne apud Belnam in 1142 AD modern Switzerland also attest to the existence of a feminine form Belena 8 In Noricum Belenus may also have been accompanied by an otherwise unknown female deity named Belestis or Belena Belestis Augusta Belestris Belinca possibly worshipped as a goddess of nature and fertility 29 12 Two shrines dedicated to the goddess were found in Podljubelj in the Karawanks 29 Related beliefs editMedieval Ireland edit The Irish Bel has been speculated by some scholars to be linked to the god Belenus 6 Fires in honor of the deity were lit for Celtic festivals of Beltaine Bel s Fires on May 1 30 On occasion cattle was driven between two fires in order to repeal diseases which Schrijver has compared to the traditional German custom of burning henbane collected on Midsummer to protect the cattle against diseases and witchcraft 31 Modern Slovenia edit The Slovenian divinity Belin attested in the 19th century by historian Simon Rutar may provide evidence of the survival of Belenus cult in the region and of its later integration into Slovenian beliefs possibly blended with attributes of the Slavic god Belibog 32 4 The local population regarded him as a great healer who could cure blindness with his key 33 Professor Monika Kropej also states that Belenus was possibly incorporated into the Slovenian lore as the belici a type of fairy like beings 29 An incised stone in southwestern Slovenia called berlina by the local population among other names may also be related It is connected to ancient rituals and features two primitively carved figures with heads ornamented with rays 4 Legacy editScience edit The minor planet 11284 Belenus is named after him 34 Popular culture edit The Gauls of the Asterix franchise often swear by Belenos and Toutatis 35 References edit Schrijver 1999 p 24 Apart from the association with the Roman Apollo little is known about the function and significance of Belenos Pauly Wissowa s v Belenus He is probably associated with medicine Birkhan 2006 p 195 Celtic deity whose name is often connected with the Graeco Roman god Apollo see interpretatio romana although the cult of Belenos seems to have preserved a degree of independence Belenus was often identified with Apollo and seen as a typical Karnian oracle and health giving deity a b c d e f g h Birkhan 2006 p 195 a b c Prosper 2017 p 258 a b c d e MacKillop 2004 s v Belenus a b c Leeming 2005 p 48 Schrijver 1999 pp 24 25 a b c d e Delamarre 2003 p 72 Schrijver 1999 pp 24 27 Maier 1994 p 40 de Bernardo Stempel Patrizia Hainzmann Manfred Mathieu Nicolas 2013 de Bernardo Stempel Patrizia Hofeneder Andreas eds Celtic and Other Indigenous Divine Names Found in the Italian Peninsula Theonymie celtique cultes interpretatio Keltische Theonymie Kulte Interpretatio 1 ed Austrian Academy of Sciences Press p 79 ISBN 978 3 7001 7369 4 JSTOR j ctv8mdn28 8 a b c d e f Sasel Kos 2022 p 228 Schrijver 1999 p 27 28 a b Prosper 2017 p 262 Schrijver 1999 pp 30 34 39 40 Schrijver 1999 p 27 a b Delamarre 2003 p 71 Schrijver 1999 p 26 Schrijver 1999 pp 30 31 de Aspuru Jose Ignacio San Vicente Gonzalez 2008 El jinete desnudo y la silla de montar de la estela de Iruna Alava Hispania Antiqua 32 75 78 ISSN 1130 0515 Gricourt Daniel Dominique Hollard 2002 Lugus et le cheval Dialogues d histoire ancienne 28 2 136 doi 10 3406 dha 2002 2475 a b c d e f g Aldhouse Green 1997 pp 30 31 Nicole Jufer amp Thierry Luginbuhl 2001 Les dieux gaulois repertoire des noms de divinites celtiques connus par l epigraphie les textes antiques et la toponymie Paris Editions Errance ISBN 2 87772 200 7 a b Maier Bernhard 2012 Geschichte und Kultur der Kelten C H Beck a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Schrijver 1999 p 24 Sasel Kos 2022 p 229 MacKillop 2004 s v Belenus Koch John T 2006 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia Santa Barbara ABC CLIO Inc ISBN 1 85109 440 7 a b c Kropej 2012 p 217 MacKillop 2004 s v Belenus Schrijver 1999 pp 34 35 Sasel Kos 2001 p 14 Sasel Kos 2001 p 9 Small Body Database Lookup ssd jpl nasa gov Retrieved 3 January 2023 Gravil Richard 2003 Gravil Richard ed Among the Men of Old Wordsworth s Bardic Vocation 1787 1842 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 11 32 doi 10 1057 9780230510333 2 ISBN 978 0 230 51033 3 Bibliography edit Aldhouse Green Miranda J 1997 Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 27975 5 Birkhan Helmut 2006 Belenos Belinos In Koch John T ed Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 440 0 Delamarre Xavier 2003 Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Une approche linguistique du vieux celtique continental Errance ISBN 9782877723695 Kropej Monika 2012 Supernatural beings from Slovenian myth and folktales Zalozba ZRC ISBN 978 961 254 428 7 Leeming David A 2005 The Oxford Companion to World Mythology Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515669 0 MacKillop James 2004 A dictionary of Celtic mythology Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860967 1 Maier Bernhard 1994 Lexikon der keltischen Religion und Kultur A Kroner ISBN 978 3 520 46601 3 Prosper Blanca Maria 2017 The irreducible Gauls used to swear by Belenos Or did they Celtic religion henbane and historical misapprehensions Zeitschrift fur celtische Philologie 64 1 doi 10 1515 zcph 2017 0007 ISSN 1865 889X S2CID 165188823 Sasel Kos Marjeta 2001 Belin Studia mythologica Slavica 4 9 16 doi 10 3986 sms v4i0 1807 ISSN 1581 128X Sasel Kos Marjeta 2022 Belenus Cybele and Attis Echoes of their Cults through the Centuries Studia mythologica Slavica 25 doi 10 3986 SMS20222511 ISSN 1581 128X Schrijver Peter 1999 On Henbane and Early European Narcotics Zeitschrift fur celtische Philologie 51 1 17 45 doi 10 1515 zcph 1999 51 1 17 ISSN 1865 889X S2CID 162678252 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Belenus amp oldid 1191232169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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