Aveta

Aveta was a Gaulish goddess worshipped chiefly among the Treveri, in the region of Trier. She was a mother goddess associated with fertility, and is known there from an altar and from small terracotta figurines. Her name also appears on a dedication from Mont-Afrique, near Dijon, and independently as a personal name.
Name
[edit]Her name is recorded on two inscriptions from the Altbachtal temple precinct at Trier,[1][2] and on a dedication from Mont-Afrique in Burgundy.[3][4] The same name is also borne by a private individual.[5][6]
Cult
[edit]Aveta was venerated among the Treveri, to whom she appears to have been a local deity.[7] In the Altbachtal temple precinct at Trier, an altar naming her was recovered from one of the temples, Building 17.[8] Edith Wightman records that a temple to Aveta there was full of terracotta statuettes of the mother-goddess type.[2] Similar clay figurines were dedicated at a rural sanctuary at Dhronecken nearby.[7]
A dedication to Aveta was also found at Mont-Afrique, near Dijon, in a border zone between the Aedui and the Lingones.[4][a] A possible further attestation at Avenches has been noted, though the reading is uncertain.[4]
Interpretation
[edit]Aveta is generally understood as a mother goddess of the Treveri.[2][7] Miranda Aldhouse-Green further interprets her as a goddess of springs and of healing, and links her with the healing goddess Sirona.[9]
The figurines associated with Aveta show a seated goddess holding a basket of fruit or a small dog in her lap, or nursing a swaddled child. Other examples depict a standing naked figure of the Venus type, which stresses her fertility.[2] Some clay figures from the region carry emblems of corn or bread, or offer fruit to a small dog.[7] Aldhouse-Green regards the dog as interchangeable with these fertility symbols, and takes it to express a healing or regenerative aspect of the goddess.[7]
Epigraphy
[edit]The name Aveta belongs both to a Celtic goddess and to private individuals, so that dedications to the deity must be distinguished from funerary and other texts that merely record persons of the name.[6] The dedications naming the goddess are few. They come from Augusta Treverorum (Trier) among the Treveri, from Mont-Afrique in the territory of the Lingones, possibly from Aventicum (Avenches) in the land of the Helvetii.[4]
| Text | Find-spot | Divine name(s) | Translation | Reference | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avetae Acaunae Aug(ustae) Ser(vius) Sulpicius P(ubli) Plaut(us) v(otum) s(olvit) l(ibens) m(erito) | Avenches | Aveta (Acauna) | To Aveta Acauna Augusta, Servius Sulpicius Plautus, son of Publius, fulfilled his vow willingly and deservedly. | CIL XIII, 5074 | Aveta bears the by-name Acauna and the imperial title Augusta. Re-edited as AE 2021, 962. |
| Deae Avetae adfines | Trier | Aveta | To the goddess Aveta, the relatives by marriage (dedicated this). | Finke 5 | On a sculpted monument (CSIR Deutschland IV.3, 27). The dedicators are described as adfines. |
| [...] et deae Avetae Tib(erius) Venus[ti]us Vital(is) C(aius) Leusius Giamissa M(arcus) Tongon[i]us Iul(ius) Aivinius Lossa Va[...]inius Varus Annius Iarus Brittonius Hilarus d(ono) d(ederunt) | Trier | Aveta | To [...] and the goddess Aveta, the dedicators gave this as a gift. | Nesselhauf 1 | Aveta is paired with a second deity whose name is lost at the beginning. Seven dedicators are named. On a sculpted monument (CSIR Deutschland IV.3, 28). |
| [deae] Aveta[e ...] Pater[...] v(otum) s(olvit) | Lingones territory | Aveta | [To the goddess] Aveta, Pater[...] fulfilled his vow. | ILTG 406 | Fragmentary. The dedication to the goddess (deae) is restored. Exact find-spot not recorded. |
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]Primary sources
[edit]- Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum. Vol. XIII, Inscriptiones trium Galliarum et Germaniarum Latinae. Berlin, 1899–1943.
- Finke, H. (1927). "Neue Inschriften". Bericht der Römisch-Germanischen Kommission. 17: 1–107, 198–231.
- Le Bohec, Yann (2003). Inscriptions de la cité des Lingons. Inscriptions latines de Gaule (Belgique) 1. Paris.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Nesselhauf, H. (1937). "Neue Inschriften aus dem römischen Germanien und den angrenzenden Gebieten". Bericht der Römisch-Germanischen Kommission. 27: 51–134.
- Wuilleumier, Pierre (1963). Inscriptions latines des Trois Gaules. Gallia, supplément 17. Paris.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Bibliography
[edit]- Gose, Erich (1972). Der gallo-römische Tempelbezirk im Altbachtal zu Trier. Trierer Grabungen und Forschungen. Vol. 7. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern.
- Green, Miranda J. (1992). Animals in Celtic Life and Myth. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-05030-8.
- Green, Miranda (1996). "The Celtic Goddess as Healer". In Billington, Sandra; Green, Miranda (eds.). The Concept of the Goddess. London: Routledge. pp. 26–40. ISBN 0-415-14421-3.
- Maier, Bernhard (2001). Die Religion der Kelten: Götter, Mythen, Weltbild. Munich: C. H. Beck. ISBN 3-406-48234-1.
- Raepsaet-Charlier, Marie-Thérèse (2012). "Les cultes de la cité des Lingons. L'apport des inscriptions". In de Cazanove, Olivier; Méniel, Patrice (eds.). Étudier les lieux de culte de Gaule romaine. Montagnac: Éditions Monique Mergoil. pp. 37–73. ISBN 978-2-35518-029-3.
- Wightman, Edith Mary (1970). Roman Trier and the Treveri. London: Rupert Hart-Davis.
Further reading
[edit]- Jufer, Nicole; Luginbühl, Thierry (2001). Répertoire des dieux gaulois. Paris: Errance.
