「アルティオ」の版間の差分

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Other inscriptions to the goddess have been discovered in [[Daun, Germany|Daun]] (CIL 13, 4203), [[Weilerbach]] (CIL 13, 4113), [[Heddernheim]] (CIL 13, 7375 [4, p 125]), and [[Stockstadt (disambiguation)|Stockstadt]] (CIL 13, 11789).<ref>''[[Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum|CIL]]'' XIII</ref>
 
Other inscriptions to the goddess have been discovered in [[Daun, Germany|Daun]] (CIL 13, 4203), [[Weilerbach]] (CIL 13, 4113), [[Heddernheim]] (CIL 13, 7375 [4, p 125]), and [[Stockstadt (disambiguation)|Stockstadt]] (CIL 13, 11789).<ref>''[[Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum|CIL]]'' XIII</ref>
 
== Popular culture ==
 
Artio is a playable character in the video game ''[[Smite (video game)|Smite]]''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Artio: The Bear Goddess|url=https://www.smitegame.com/gods/artio|url-status=live|access-date=2021-06-01|website=www.smitegame.com|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170805030015/http://www.smitegame.com:80/gods/artio/ |archive-date=2017-08-05 }}</ref> She comes from the [[Celtic deities|Celtic pantheon]] and is a melee, magical guardian. She can freely transform between her human representation (druid stance) and her bear form (bear stance), both of which come with their own sets of abilities. Her kit mainly focuses on healing herself and her allies and locking down enemies in her druid stance and then outputting large amounts of damage with her bear stance.
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

2022年11月20日 (日) 06:37時点における版

アルティオ(Artio、ガロ・ローマ宗教ではDea Artio)はケルトの熊の女神である。特にスイスのベルンでは、彼女の崇拝の証が発見されている。彼女の名前は、ガリア語で「熊」を意味するartosに由来する[1]

Name

The Gaulish theonym Artiō derives from the Celtic word for the 'bear', artos (cf. Old Irish art, Middle Welsh arth, Old Breton ard), itself from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ŕ̥tḱos ('bear'). A Celtic form reconstructed as *Arto-rix ('Bear-King') could be the source for the name Arthur, via a Latinized form *Artori(u)s. The Basque hartz ('bear') is also presumed to be a Celtic loanword.テンプレート:Sfnテンプレート:Sfn

Attestations

A bronze sculpture from the Muri statuette group, found near Bern in Switzerland, shows a large bear facing a woman seated in a chair, with a small tree behind the bear. The woman seems to hold fruit in her lap, perhaps feeding the bear.[2] The sculpture has a large rectangular bronze base, which bears the inscription "Deae Artioni / Licinia Sabinilla" ("To the Goddess Artio" or "Artionis", "from Licinia Sabinilla"). If the name is Gaulish but the syntax is Latin, a dative Artioni would give an i-stem nominative *Artionis or an n-stem nominative *Artio. That would perhaps correspond to a Gaulish n-stem nominative *Artiu.

Other inscriptions to the goddess have been discovered in Daun (CIL 13, 4203), Weilerbach (CIL 13, 4113), Heddernheim (CIL 13, 7375 [4, p 125]), and Stockstadt (CIL 13, 11789).[3]

References

Bibliography

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External links

テンプレート:Celtic mythology (ancient)