entity_id,period_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status ENT_CEL_ABNOBA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_ARDUINNA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_ARTIO,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_BELENUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_BELISAMA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_BORVO,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_CAMULOS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_CATHUBODUA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_CERNUNNOS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_DAMONA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_EPONA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_ESUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_GRANNUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_LENUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_LITAVIS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_LUGUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,high,Lugus as pan-Celtic deity is pre-Roman; place names (Lugdunum) attested from Iron Age settlement patterns; Delamarre (2003) p. 208,SRC_DELAMARRE_GAULISH,reviewed ENT_CEL_MAPONOS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,high,Chamalieres defixio (1st c. BCE) attests Maponos in Gaul; British inscriptions Roman period; cognate tradition prehistoric,SRC_DELAMARRE_GAULISH,reviewed ENT_CEL_MATRES,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,high,Mother goddess cult attested from Late Bronze Age in Celtic regions; Roman-period inscriptions preserve pre-Roman tradition,SRC_OLMSTED_GODS_CELTS,reviewed ENT_CEL_NANTOSUELTA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_NEMAUSUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_OGMIOS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_RITONA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_ROSMERTA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,Pre-Roman Gaulish goddess; Roman-period inscriptions preserve an Iron Age sovereignty figure; Duval (1976) p. 77,SRC_DUVAL_DIEUX_GAULE,reviewed ENT_CEL_SEQUANA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_SIRONA,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_SMERTRIOS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_SUCELLUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_TARANIS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_TEUTATES,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish entities attested through Iron Age inscriptions, Roman-era accounts, and iconographic evidence.",, ENT_CEL_UCUETIS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_CEL_VOSEGUS,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,B,Gaulish/Gallo-Roman deity of the Celtic Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_WEL_BRAN,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,low,"The Celtic severed-head cult documented archaeologically from the Iron Age (Roquepertuse, Entremont; La Tène period) provides the probable cultic substrate for Brân's speaking head tradition; Green (1992) argues for continuity between Iron Age head-cult practice and the Mabinogi narrative; confidence is low as there is no direct inscription or attestation for a ""Brân"" figure in the Iron Age",SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_WEL_DON,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,low,"The name Dôn has been compared to Irish Danu and potentially to Gaulish divine-mother figures; if the comparison holds, the divine-mother prototype has Iron Age currency across the Celtic world; confidence is low because the equation of Dôn with Danu is debated and because the Irish Danu herself barely appears in the texts (she too is known primarily through her children's epithets)",SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_WEL_LLEU_LLAW_GYFFES,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,medium,"Gaulish *Lugus is attested in Iron Age inscriptions from Spain (Uxama Argaela; the Celtiberian city Lugudunum) and is the probable common Celtic prototype for Lugh (Irish) and Lleu (Welsh); the ""many-skilled"" deity prototype has Pan-Celtic Iron Age currency; confidence is medium because the Welsh Lleu's specific mythology is only preserved in medieval texts",SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed ENT_WEL_RHIANNON,PER_CEL_IRON_AGE,low,"The etymology *Rigantona (""Great Queen"") and the Epona parallel suggest her divine prototype has roots in Iron Age Celtic religion; her horse-goddess attributes (the impossible white horse, the processional approach) parallel the Gaulish Epona cult documented in Iron Age and Roman-period inscriptions; confidence is low because no direct Iron Age textual evidence for a Welsh Rhiannon-figure exists",SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed