Anextlomarus


Anextlomarus or Anextiomarus is an ancient Celtic deity. On an inscription from Arbeia, he appears as epithet of the Roman god Apollo. A feminine form of the name, Anextlomara, is attested in a Gallo-Roman dedication from Aventicum. He probably also appears in incomplete form in a fragmentary dedication found near Le Mans, France.

Name

The Gaulish theonym Anextlomāros has been interpreted as 'great protector', 'of great protection', or ' great in protection'. It is a compound formed with the noun anextlo- attached to māros. The feminine form Anextlomarā, attested in Aventicum, is translated as 'Great Protectress'.
Anextlomarus is also attested as a personal name at Langres.

Attestations

South Shields

The god is equated with Apollo on an inscription on a bronze bowl from Arbeia. According to Helmut Birkhan, the reading Anextiomarus may be incorrect and amended to Anextlomarus.
InscriptionTranslationReference
Apollini Anextiomaro M A SabTo Apollo Anextiomarus, Marcus A Sab RIB .

Le Mans

His name is thought to survive in incomplete form in an inscription found near Le Mans, in the territory of the Aulerci Cenomani.
InscriptionReference
I. ANEX / EIVS DEI / ENTIS. DCIL XIII 3190

Avanches

The feminine form Anextlomara occurs in an inscription from Aventicum, dated to the 1st–3rd centuries AD.
The name of the man who commissioned this dedication, Publicius, makes it possible to determine his social status as a freed public slave serving Roman municipalities and colonies. His cognomen, Aunus, indicates a Celtic origin. Augustus is to be understood here as the generic title of the reigning emperor. This double dedication suggests an intention to associate the imperial cult with a local, indigenous religious tradition. The spelling of the divine name, with an oversized X corresponding to the Greek letter chi, reflects indigenous epigraphic practices predating Roman conquest.
InscriptionTranslationReference
AneXtlomarae / et Aug / Public AunusTo Anextlomara and to the Emperor. Publicius Aunus H. Finke, Nachtrag zu CIL XIII, in B.R.G.K., 17, 1927, n. 94