Divona


Divona is a Gallo-Roman goddess of springs and rivers.
The cult of the fresh waters appears to have been particularly important among Gauls, and Celts in general, compared to the rest of Indo-European traditions.

Name

The name Divona is a derivative of the Gaulish word deuos. Toponymic evidence suggest that sacred springs have been named for the deity, such as Dēouóna, the ancient name of Cahors, or Divonne and Fosse Dionne.

Attestation and cult practices

In ancient Roman religion, goddesses of freshwater sources are often associated with the deity Fons, god of fountains and wellheads, honored at the Fontinalia for his role in the public water supply for the city. Ausonius invokes fons, the manmade outlet that makes the water available to the people, with a string of adjectives: sacer, alme, perennis, / vitree, glauce, profunde, sonore, illimis, opace, "sacred, life-giving, eternal, / glassy, blue-green, measureless, sonorous, free of mud, shaded." He hails fons as the "Genius of the city" ' having the power to offer a healing draught '. In the next line, Ausonius says that this genius or tutelary deity is Divona in the Celtic language , that is, fons added to the divae.
She is hailed in a Latin poem by Ausonius, the 4th-century Bordelais scholar-poet who was the tutor of the emperor Gratian.