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Tarvos Trigaranus

 
Celtic Mythology: Tarvos trigaranus

Tarvostrigaranus

[bull with three cranes/ egrets; three-horned]. Latin name for a presumably Celtic deity represented in two stone sculptures surviving in Paris and Trier, Germany. As his name implies, the figure is clearly a bull, accompanied by three long-legged marsh birds, which may be either cranes or egrets, both of which have much resonance in Celtic tradition. In the Paris sculpture, uncovered under Notre-Dame cathedral in 1711, Tarvos trigaranus is represented with Esus, Cernunnos, and Smertrius. While the Paris sculpture is dedicated to Jupiter, a comparable representation in Trier is dedicated to Mercury; the imagery is much the same but the name Tarvos does not appear.

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The relief of Tarvos Trigaranus on the Pillar of the Boatmen.

In ancient Gaul, Tarvos Trigaranus was a bull god. An alternative spelling is Taruos Trigaranos since the Latin script did not distinguish U and V. The words are Gaulish: Tarvos means 'bull' (Delmarre 2003 pp.291-292) - similar to Old Irish tarb, a bull, Welsh tarw, a bull, and in other Indo-European languages such as Latin taurus or Lithuanian taĆ­ras. Garanus means 'crane' (the bird), similar to Welsh, Old Cornish and Breton garan. In the Germanic languages this became *krana(n) from which is derived the English word "crane" (Delmarre 2003 p. 175). Treis, or Tri- in composition, is the number three, as seen in Tricorii ("the three troops") and Trinox ("three nights", in the Gaulish calendar of Coligny) (Delmarre 2003 pp.301-302).

The representation of Tarvos Trigaranos on the Pillar of the Boatmen shows the bull with three cranes perched on his back, standing under a tree. On an adjacent panel, Esus is shown cutting down a tree (possibly a willow) with an axe (Green 1992 pp. 93-94). A similar representation, this time with no inscription, is found on a pillar from Trier where a man with an axe cuts down a tree in which are sitting three birds and a bull's head (MacCulloch 1996 pp.157-158).

It is possible that statues of a bull with three horns, such as the one from Autun (Bourgogne, France) are related to this deity (Green 1992 pp. 93-94).

References

  • Delmare, Xavier (2003) Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise (2nd ed.) Paris: Editions Errance. ISBN 2-87772-237-6
  • Green, Miranda J. (1992) Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-27975-6
  • MacCulloch, John A. (1996) Celtic Mythology. Chicago: Academy Chicago Publications. ISBN 0-486-43656-X

External links

See also


 
 
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Smertrius
bull
Tarvos

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Celtic Mythology. A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology. Copyright © James MacKillop 1998, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tarvos Trigaranus" Read more