Intarabus

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File:Intarabus Arlon musée836.jpg
Bronze statuette of Intarabus from Foy-Noville, now at the Musée archéologique d'Arlon.

Intarabus was a Gaulish god in the pantheon of the Treveri and some neighbouring peoples. His name is known from nine inscriptions from a relatively compact area in what are now Belgium, Luxembourg, western Germany and eastern France.[1] He may have been the tutelary deity of one of the three pagi (subdivisions) of the Treveri.[2] In most cases, Intarabus is invoked alone – without any synthesis to a Roman deity, and without accompanying female deities. However, one inscription invokes him as Mars Intarabus, noting that a fanum and simulacrum of this god had been restored at Trier.[3][4] Meanwhile, another inscription from Mackwiller in Alsace gives Intarabus the epithet Narius.[5] An inscription at Ernzen in Germany has his name as [In]tarabus,[6] while another from Foy-Noville (now within the town of Bastogne in Belgium), invokes Entarabus in conjunction with the Genius Ollodagus.[7]

A bronze statuette from the Foy-Noville site, identified on the base as Deo Intarabo (in the dative case), depicts the god as a beardless, long-haired man in a tunic, draped with a wolf skin.[8] His raised right hand would presumably have held a spear or some other implement, while his left hand, extended at waist length, is now missing.[9][10]

The theatre at Echternach appears to have been dedicated to Intarabus,[11][12] as was an aedicula at Ernzen.[13] A silver ring engraved simply with the name Intarabo (again, in the dative case) was found at Dalheim.[9]

According to Helmut Birkhan, the site at Mackwiller reveals a number of evolutions in the local cult. Starting in the 1st century CE, there was a sanctuary for Narius Intarabus related to worship at a local spring. In the 2nd century CE, a mithraeum was built there, and inscriptions testify to the common worship of Mithras and Narius Intarabus. In the second half of the 3rd century, the mithraeum was replaced with a traditional Gaulish-style temple, which now enclosed the sacred spring. From this it can be seen that the Mithraic cult was abandoned in favour of the older Celtic local deities.[14]

The name ‘Intarabus’ has been characterized as “etymologically obscure”;[15] Xavier Delamarre, however, takes the name to mean entar-abus "Entre-Rivières" (between rivers).[16]

References

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  1. 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. Template:ISBN. Template:In lang
  2. Ton Derks (1998). Gods, Temples and Ritual Practices: The Transformation of Religious Ideas and Values in Roman Gaul. Amsterdam University Press. Template:ISBN. p.199.
  3. Template:CIL
  4. Joan Carbonell Manils and H. Gimeno Pascual. "Un fanum in Turgalium". p.15. In Faventia 27/2, 2005. Template:In lang
  5. AE 1957, 0155b
  6. AE 1978, 0513
  7. Template:CIL
  8. David Colling (2011), La statuette d'Intarabus de Foy-Noville, Annales de l'Institut Archéologique du Luxembourg, 145, p. 83-89, ISSN 0776-1244
  9. a b Drawing of the ring and descriptions as given on a wall plaque at the Musée national d'histoire et d'art, Luxembourg.
  10. Jean-Luc Bodeux. « Fabuleux bestiaire d'ArdenneScript error: No such module "Unsubst". ». Le Soir, 23 August 2006. Template:In lang
  11. Template:CIL
  12. Frank Sear (2006). Roman Theatres: An Architectural Survey. Oxford University Press. Template:ISBN. p.210.
  13. Weihedenkmal des Gottes Intarabus in Ernzen Template:Webarchive and Kulturgüter in der Region Trier Template:Webarchive, both concerning reconstructed monuments to Intarabus at Ernzen (with photographs). Template:In lang
  14. Helmut Birkhan: Kelten. Versuch einer Gesamtdarstellung ihrer Kultur. p. 280.
  15. Bernhard Maier (1998). Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture. Boydell & Brewer. Template:ISBN. p.158.
  16. Xavier Delamarre (2003). Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise : Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental, 2e édition. Éditions Errance. Template:ISBN. pp.29, 162. Template:In lang

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