St. George and the Dragon, ii. 163 sq., iv. 107;
and the Parilia, ii. 324 sqq., v. 308, 309;
patron saint of cattle, horses, and wolves, ii. 330, 332, 336, 337, 338;
chapel of, ii. 337;
represented by a living man on horseback, ii. 337;
as a spirit of trees or vegetation, ii. 343 sq.;
as giver of offspring to women, ii. 344 sqq., v. 78, 79, 90;
in relation to serpents, ii. 344, 344 n. 4;
in Syria, ii. 346, v. 78;
perhaps the modern equivalent of Tammuz or Adonis, ii. 346;