Belatucadros

Belatucadros or Belatucadrus, was a deity worshipped in Celtic northern Britain, particularly in Cumberland and Westmorland. In the Roman period he was identified with Mars and appears to have been worshipped by lower-ranked Roman soldiers as well as by Britons. In five inscriptions he is called Mars Belatucadrus and the name is frequently translated as "fair shining one" or "fair slayer."[1]

A black and white drawing of a stone block with a Latin inscription.
Altar to Belatocadrus from Kirkbride, Cumbria. It is inscribed DEO BELATO/CADROPEISI/US·M[ile]·SOLU/IT VOTU/M·L[ibens] M[erito].

Belatucadros is known from approximately 28 inscriptions in the vicinity of Hadrian's Wall.[2] Dedications to Balatocadrus, Balatucadrus, Balaticaurus, Balatucairus, Baliticaurus, Belatucairus, Belatugagus, Belleticaurus, Blatucadrus and Blatucairus are generally accepted as variants of the most common of these forms: Belatucadrus.[2] Altars dedicated to him were usually small, simple and plain, leading to the suggestion that this god was mainly worshipped by people of low social status. His name never appears with a female consort and there is no certain extant representation of him.

Ross suggests that his name, and that of a similar local god, Cocidius, may be epithets for a common general type of Celtic horned god. A horned head was found near the shrine of Belatucadros at Netherby, Cumbria but cannot be securely identified with the god.[1]

References

  1. Ross 1967, pp. 213, 235.
  2. Coulston & Phillips 1988, p. 55.

Sources

  • Coulston, Jon C.; Phillips, E.J. (1988). Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain, Volume I, Fascicule 6. Hadrian's Wall West of the North Tyne, and Carlisle. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-726058-6.
  • Ross, Anne (1967). Pagan Celtic Britain. Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 0-902357-03-4.

Further reading

  • Fairless, K.J. (1984). "Three Religious Cults from the Northern Frontier Region". In Miket, R.; Burgess, C. (eds.). Between and Beyond the Wall. Essays on the Prehistory and History of North Britain in Honour of George Jobey. Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers. pp. 224–242. ISBN 0-85976-087-1.
  • Green, Miranda J. (1992). Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-01516-3.
  • MacCulloch, J.A. (1911). The Religion of the Ancient Celts. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-42765-X.
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