Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Many depictions of her also draw strongly on Celtic goddesses.
Epona shares the same name with the Celtic goddess of horses.
The name may also be a reference to the Celtic goddess Brigid.
"Epona is the name of the Celtic goddess," said Summer.
The deity involved was usually Nemetona - a Celtic goddess.
The river is named after Sionna, a Celtic goddess.
Brighid: Celtic goddess of poetry, fire, and the forge.
"Are they related to fertility cults, to Celtic goddesses (or gods)?
Inciona is a little-known Celtic goddess of the Treveran region.
Perceptions of native Celtic goddesses had changed under Roman hegemony: only the names remained the same.
It is named after the Celtic goddess Belisana.
He had it from good sources that she was chaste and would not consider playing bedroom roulette, as he suspected his Celtic goddess often did.
Cerridwen, the Celtic goddess of wisdom, was the muse who brought inspiration to storytellers and those in the creative arts.
St. Medan of the Kirkmaidens was a Celtic goddess associated with water healing.
I have heard it said that they were built by Iron Age men in honour of Megan, a Celtic goddess.
Satiada was a Celtic goddess worshipped in Roman Britain.
During Roman Britain, the river may have been associated with the Celtic goddess Ancasta.
Celtic Goddesses; warriors, virgins and mothers, British Museum Press, 1995.
Macha, so he informed us, was the Celtic goddess of cunning, also known as the queen of phantoms."
Ceridwen is regarded by modern Wiccans as the Celtic goddess of rebirth, transformation, and inspiration.
Vagdavercustis was most likely a native Germanic or Celtic goddess, who may have had a link with trees or woods.
Cerridwen was a Celtic goddess who possessed a cauldron that had a brew that took a year and a day to construct.
Bormana is a Celtic goddess, the female equivalent of the god Borvo (Bormanus).
Muma (Celtic goddess)
Imbolc is a festival belonging to Brigid, the Celtic goddess who, in later times, became famous as a Christian saint.