Footnote 716:[(return)]

CIL xiii. 5160, xii. 2199. Rh[^y]s, however, derives Artaios from ar, "ploughed land," and equates the god with Mercurius Cultor.

Footnote 717:[(return)]

CIL xii. 1556-1558; D'Arbois, RC x. 165.

Footnote 718:[(return)]

For all these place and personal names, see Holder and D'Arbois, op. cit. Les Celtes, 47 f., Les Druides, 157 f.

Footnote 719:[(return)]

See p. [32], supra; Reinach, CMR i. 72, Rev. Arch. ii. 123.

Footnote 720:[(return)]

O'Grady, ii. 123.

Footnote 721:[(return)]

Epona is fully discussed by Reinach in his Epona, 1895, and in articles (illustrated) in Rev. Arch. vols. 26, 33, 35, 40, etc. See also ii. [1898], 190.

Footnote 722:[(return)]

Reinach suggests that this may explain why Vercingetorix, in view of siege by the Romans, sent away his horses. They were too sacred to be eaten. Cæsar, vii. 71; Reinach, RC xxvii. 1 f.

Footnote 723:[(return)]

Juvenal, viii. 154; Apul. Metam. iii. 27; Min. Felix, Octav. xxvii. 7.

Footnote 724:[(return)]

For the inscriptions, see Holder, s.v. "Epona."

Footnote 725:[(return)]

CIL iii. 7904.