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Turiacus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Turiacus is a deity, presumably Lusitanian, known from a single Roman dedicatory inscription from Santo Tirso in Portugal. The inscription reads:

L VALERIVS SILVANVS / MILES LEG / VI VICT / [DE]O TVRIACO V S L M[1]

A dedication to Turiacus by Lucius Valerius Silvanus of the VI Roman Legion "Victrix". No other inscription references the deity, but attempts have been made to link the name with proto-Celtic *torko- (Irish torc Welsh twrch) meaning a wild boar, as well as with imaginary Irish words supposedly meaning a fort or a king.[2]

References

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  1. ^ CIL II 2374, Hispania Epigraphia 8191
  2. ^ Cambridge Modern Language Review vol. 14 (1919)