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.
- Caesar, De bello Gallico, vi. 14.
- See especially CIL, CIR.
- 3 vols., Leipzig, 1896 ff.
- See infra, pp. 157–58.
- 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).
- De bello Gallico, vi. 17.
- ib. vi. 18.
- MacCulloch [b], pp. 29 ff.
- Argonautica, iv. 609 f.
- Diodorus Siculus (first century b. c.), ii. 47.
- Herakles, 1 ff.
- Solinus, xxii. 10.
- Giraldus Cambrensis, Topographia Hiberniae, ii. 34 ff.
- Pharsalia, iii. 399 ff.
- De bello Gallico, vi. 17.
- Livy, V. xxxix. 3.
- Pausanias, X. xxiii. 7.
- Avienus (fourth century a. d.), Ora maritima, 644 ff.
- ZCP i. 27 (1899).
- ib.
- Justin (probably third century a. d.), XXIV. iv. 3.
- Diodorus Siculus, V. xxiv. I.
- See infra, p. 117.
- Diodorus Siculus, iv. 19.
- Propertius, V. x. 41.
- Pliny, Historia naturalis, xxix. 3.
- Lucan, Pharsalia, i. 455ff.; Diodorus Siculus, v. 28.