Dexivates


The Dexivates were a small Gallic tribe dwelling in the southern part of modern Vaucluse, near the present-day village of Cadenet, during the Iron Age and the Roman period.

Name

The tribe is attested as Dexivatium by Pliny in the 1st century AD.
The Gaulish ethnonym Dexiuates derives from the stem deksiu-. A local goddess is also attested as Dexiua or Dexsiua. The name Dexivates thus either means 'those who live in the south', or 'those of the goddess Dexiua', whose name could be translated as 'she who is on the right / in the south', whence 'the Favourable'.

Geography

The territory of the Dexivates was located in the Durance valley, south of the Luberon massif, in what is today known as the. They dwelled north of the Salyes and Anatilii, east of the Cavares, south of the Vocontii and Albici, and west of the Reii. According to historian Guy Barruol, they were part of the Saluvian confederation.
Built in the 3rd–2nd century BC, the oppidum of Castellar was probably the chief town of the Dexivates. The site was occupied until at least the 3rd century AD. Another protohistorical oppidum was located in the, built in the Middle Ages on a former Gallic site. The countryside was densely populated, with 38 rural sites identified from the Roman period.

Culture

The Dexivates were influenced by Greek culture, as attested by a series of Gallo-Greek inscriptions referring to personal names, and the discovery of a large hoard of Massaliote coins at Castellar dated from the 3rd–2nd centuries BC.

Religion

During the Roman period, the former oppidum of Castellar saw the creation of a shrine devoted to the goddess Dexiua, a local deity only found in the region and with a clear ethnic dimension.
Two inscriptions dedicated to the native god Lanovalus were found near a mountain stream called Laval, whose name is related to the deity. Lanovalus has been interpreted as a healing god in the context of a water-related cult. His name literally means 'Full Prince', stemming from the Gaulish root lano- attached to the word ualos. An altar dedicated to Iuppiter Optimus Maximus is also known from the castle of Cadenet.
Several representations of a human foot engraved on stelae are known from Castellar and its vicinity. Two conflicting interpretations have been proposed: a votive function, or, more likely, a funerary function, by comparing with similar sites from southern Gaul.

Primary sources