Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Dea Sequana


Related Topics

In the News (Fri 1 Jun 12)

  
 Lady Airiel's Sanctuary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Dea Matrona: The Celtic deity at the source of the river Marne (northeastern France).
Dea Sequana: The Celtic deity at the source of the river Seine (northern France).
Sequanna (Sequana): The Celtic goddess of the river Seine.
celticflower.tripod.com /deities.html   (11241 words)

  
 Seine - Wikipédia
Seine vient du latin Sequana, lui-même emprunté aux peuplades celtiques autochtones.
Cependant, cette évolution a pu se produire postérieurement à l'attribution du nom Sequana par les premiers arrivants celtes : ceux-ci semblent en effet avoir parlé un « proto-celtique » où la mutation kw > p n'était pas encore réalisée, comme l'attesteraient certaines inscriptions celtibères retrouvées en Espagne.
Des objets témoignant du culte aux sources du fleuve (Dea Sequana) sont exposés au musée archéologique de Dijon.
fr.wikipedia.org /wiki/Seine   (550 words)

  
 Celtic deities, mythological beings and historical figures
Dea Matrona In Continental Brythonic mythology, Dea Matrona was the goddess of the river Marne in Gaul.
Dea Sequana In Continental Brythonic mythology, Dea Sequana was the goddess of the river Seine.
Sequanna (or Sequana) was the goddess of the river Seine and its environs.
www.mandrake-press.com /content/Articles/Definitions/celticmythbeings.html   (13655 words)

  
 Dea Sequana Essays, Term Papers on Dea Sequanas, and Research Paper Essay Help
Since 1998, our Dea Sequana experts have helped students worldwide by providing the most comprehensive, lowest-priced research service on the Internet for Dea Sequana studies and coursework.
We write Dea Sequana papers for research--24 hours a day, 7 days a week--on topics at every level of education.
Our Dea Sequana researchers are highly-educated specialists with impeccable research and writing skills who have vast experience in preparing Dea Sequana research materials.
www.essaytown.com /topics/dea_sequana_essays_papers.html   (1047 words)

  
 The Tumulus of Sequanna | ACO MYTHOLOGY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
History: Sequanna was the personification of the river Seine, one of the five principal rivers of France.
A healing stone was established at Fontes Sequanae in the second or first century, BC.
The Romans built two temples, a precinct and other structures centered around the spring and pool.
www.ancuairt.org /tumulus/sequanna.htm   (307 words)

  
 MacCulloch's Religion of the Ancient Celts: River and Well Worship
On inscriptions a river name is prefixed by some divine epithet--dea, augusta, and the worshipper records his gratitude for benefits received from the divinity or the river itself.
Thus in the shrine of Dea Sequana was found a vase with over a hundred; another contained over eight hundred.
Inscriptions were engraved on plaques which were fastened to the walls of temples, or placed in springs.
www.celtic-twilight.com /otherworld/druidism/macculloch/river_wellworship.htm   (5761 words)

  
 dea
DEA is an abbreviation of the following, among others:
DEA Briefs and Background, Law Enforcement, DEA Fugitives
TRAC: DEA Site - Comprehensive, independent, and nonpartisan...
www.fact-library.com /dea.html   (38 words)

  
 dea optimo maximo - OneLook Dictionary Search   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Sorry, no dictionaries indexed in the selected category contain the phrase dea optimo maximo.
You can look up the words in the phrase individually using these links: dea optimo maximo
If you're sure it's a word, try doing a general web search for dea optimo maximo:   Google, AltaVista
onelook.com /?w=dea+optimo+maximo&ls=a   (90 words)

  
 New Finds (www.romanfindsgroup.org.uk)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Perhaps Senua presided over a sacred spring, or perhaps she was a river goddess: certainly, the Ravenna Cosmography lists a river named Senua which has not yet been located more closely than southern Britain.
In addition to Sulis, one thinks also of Dea Sequana, the goddess of the source of the Seine, whose name was also that of the river.
It remains to be seen whether the results of fieldwork will provide any further clues to Senua's identity.
www.romanfindsgroup.org.uk /finds.html   (7020 words)

  
 Dea Sequana   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Dea Sequana
Dea Sequana
article at Free Euro Online Encyclopedia
It uses material from the wikipedia article Dea Sequana.
www.eurofreehost.com /de/Dea_Sequana.html   (87 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.