The Celtic god Toutatis or Teutates was worshipped in ancient Gaul and Britain. On the basis of his name’s etymology, he has widely interpreted to be a tribal protector. Today, he is best known under the name Toutatis, through the Gaulish catchphrase ‘By Toutatis’, invented for the Asterix comics by Goscinni and Uderzo. The spelling Toutatis, however, is authentic and attested by about ten ancient inscriptions. He is also known under the spelling 'Teutates' from a passage in Lucan.
Teutates was worshipped especially in Gaul and in Roman Britain. Inscriptions to him have been recovered in the United Kingdom, for example that at Cumberland Quarries (RIB 1017), dedicated to Jupiter Optimus Maximus and Mars Toutatis.
Two dedications have also been found in Noricum and Rome. Teutates was one of three Celtic Gods mentioned by the Roman poet Lucan in the 1st century AD, the other two being Esus, ‘Lord’, and Taranis, ‘thunderer’. According to later commentators, victims sacrificed to Teutates were killed by being plunged headfirst into a vat filled with an unspecified liquid. Present day scholars frequently speak of ‘the toutates’ as plural, preferring respectively to the patrons of the several tribes.
Of the two later commentators on Luacan’s text, one identifies Teutates with Mercury, the other with Mars.
Teutates is widely thought to be derived from the ProtoCeltic, ‘teuta’ meaning ‘people’ or ‘tribe’. It has been suggested that the name means ‘father of the tribe’ but if this were the case, the expected name would be ‘toutater’.
As noted above, among a pair of later reviewers on Lucan’s work, one identifies Teutates with Mercury and Esus with Mars. At times the Gaulish ‘Mercury’ may have the characteristic of a warrior, while the Gaulish ‘Mars’ as may act as a God of protection or healing.
Paul-Marie Duval argues that each tribe had its own ‘toutatis’; he further considers the Gaulish Mars the product of syncretism with the Celtic ‘toutes’, noting the great number of indigenous epiyhets under which Mars was worshipped.
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