Page:The Mythology of All Races Vol 3 (Celtic and Slavic).djvu/499

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CELTIC

Introduction

Citation by author's name or by title of a text or a volume of a series refers to the same in the various sections of the Bibliography. Where an author has written several works they are distinguished as [a], [b], etc.

  1. Caesar, De bello Gallico, vi. 14.
  2. See especially CIL, CIR.
  3. 3 vols., Leipzig, 1896 ff.
  4. See infra, pp. 157–58.
  5. The exact meaning of simulacra in this passage is a little un-certain. Possibly they were boundary stones, like the Classical herms (cf. Mythology of All Races, Boston, 1916, i. 194–95); but they were probably "symbols" rather than "images" (see MacCulloch [b], pp. 284–85), and may have been standing-stones (see infra, pp. 158–59).
  6. De bello Gallico, vi. 17.
  7. ib. vi. 18.
  8. MacCulloch [b], pp. 29 ff.
  9. Argonautica, iv. 609 f.
  10. Diodorus Siculus (first century b. c.), ii. 47.
  11. Herakles, 1 ff.
  12. Solinus, xxii. 10.
  13. Giraldus Cambrensis, Topographia Hiberniae, ii. 34 ff.
  14. Pharsalia, iii. 399 ff.
  15. De bello Gallico, vi. 17.
  16. Livy, V. xxxix. 3.
  17. Pausanias, X. xxiii. 7.
  18. Avienus (fourth century a. d.), Ora maritima, 644 ff.
  19. ZCP i. 27 (1899).
  20. ib.
  21. Justin (probably third century a. d.), XXIV. iv. 3.
  22. Diodorus Siculus, V. xxiv. I.
  23. See infra, p. 117.
  24. Diodorus Siculus, iv. 19.
  25. Propertius, V. x. 41.
  26. Pliny, Historia naturalis, xxix. 3.
  27. Lucan, Pharsalia, i. 455ff.; Diodorus Siculus, v. 28.