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God of Amiens

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The God of Amiens

The God of Amiens is a Gallo-Roman bronze statuette found in Amiens, Somme. The statuette, which has been dated to the end of the 1st century AD, is of a human figure sat in lotus position with an animal right ear, perhaps intended to be a deer's. This statuette is in the collection of the Musée de Picardie.

The God of Amiens has been linked iconographically with two other Gallo-Roman statuettes from northeastern France, the God of Besançon and God of Lantilly. These have been thought to represent of a common Gaulish god, whose attributes included a bunch of grapes, a serpent, and an animal ear. This god is perhaps connected with the Celtic stag god Cernunnos.

Discovery

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The statuette was discovered in October 1845 in the Henriville neighborhood of Amiens, on the property of one Captain Bournel. The statuette was found in a burial area with Roman coins (now lost). Bournel donated the statuette the Société des Antiquaires de Picardie [fr]. The antiquarian Marcel Jérôme Rigollot reported this find in an article for the Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires de Picardie in 1846.[1][2]

The statuette is in the collection of the Musée de Picardie. It was restored in 1987 by M.-E. Meyohas and P. Chantriaux.[2]

Description

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The statuette is 12cm tall and 8.5cm wide. It is made of two cast bronze plates: left arm, head, and cloak belong to one, while the right arm, torso, and legs belong to the other. The statue has been dated to near the end of the 1st century AD, during the Roman occupation of Gaul.[2]

The statuette is of a young man seated in lotus position. He has a tunic clasped to his torso by a belt, and a cloak (a sagum) fastened to his right shoulder. He is wearing shoes, of which only the soles are rendered. His right arm is amputated at the forearm. His left arm has survived in its entirety, but the hand is in a hollow fist, as if clutching a (now missing) object. His head is 29mm in height. His face is beardless. His hair is voluminous and curly. His facial features, particularly his eyes, are rendered rather heavily. He gazes upward. His right ear, emerging from the curly hair, is elongated (19mm in length) and cornet-shaped. Only the lobe of his left ear is visible under his hair.[2][3]: 193 [4]: 100 [5]: fn 12 

A Gaulish god with one animal ear?

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Parallels

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When Rigollot announced the find, he complained that a second example of this type of statue could not be found;[1]: 303 [a] on the contrary, the statue has been closely linked with two other Gallo-Roman statuettes, both also discovered in northeastern France. These represent a type, with the characteristic attributes of an elongated right animal ear, a bunch of grapes, and a serpent.[6]: 85 [4]: 101 

Lithograph of the God of Besançon

First, a small (12cm tall) bronze statuette of a seated god from Besançon.[b] The statuette is of a male youth seated upon a rock. The youth wears a belted tunic and chlamys. On his legs are tight breeches and on his feet are sandals. His right arm is projected outwards and in his right hand he holds a bunch of grapes against his right knee. Around the left hand, a serpent is coiled (whose head and tail are unfortunately missing). The figure has a small, beardless head and a peculiarly long and wide neck. By contrast to the Amiens stateutte, his hair is rather flat and his gaze is lowered. His right ear is elongated and very pointed. Unlike the Amiens statuette, the human left ear is fully visible.[4]: 98–100 

The God of Lantilly

Second, a medium-sized (45cm tall) stone statue from Lantilly.[c] The statue is of a nude human figure seated on a low seat. A large bunch of grapes sit between his knees. His left hand is placed on his thigh; his right hand, badly broken, seems to have held a serpent. The serpent coils around the seat and has a tail like that of a fish. Missing are the head of the serpent and, frustratingly, the head of the human figure.[d] A rectangular opening (8cm by 5cm) has been carved in this figure's stomach, presumably intended to hold some object.[9]: 282–283 [10]: 49 [4]: 101 

On the basis of these statues, we can reconstruct the missing features of the Amiens statuette. In his left hand, where a hole shows something was once grasped, he held the body of a snake. In his right hand (entirely missing), he held a bunch of grapes.[2][4]: 100 

Interpretation

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Rigollot identified the Amiens statue as a representation of Midas (portrayed, mythologically, with the ears of a donkey),[1][2] but this interpretation has not been sustained.[10]: 46  The lotus pose, association with the animal world, and heavy facial features allow the Amiens statuette to be identified as a Celtic representation of a god.[4]: 100 [3]: 193 [e] The attributes are not identifiable with those of any god in the Greco-Roman pantheon, so these three statues have been thought to represent a common Gaulish god.[3]: 193 

The God of Amiens has been thought to most closely approach a native Gaulish representation of this god.[6]: 85 [4]: 100  The Besançon statuette shows heavy Greco-Roman influence (for example, in the rock seat, and the naturalistic treatment of the god's head). The treatment of the chlamys seems borrowed from representations of Hermes. The clumsy treatment of the attire on the Amiens god, by contrast, is much more characteristic of Gaulish art.[4]: 100  The Lantilly and Besançon gods are seated, whereas the Amiens god sits in the typical lotus pose of Celtic gods.[6]: 85–86  The nudity of the Lantilly god is a peculiarity; the Besançon and Amiens gods are both clothed.[6]: 86 

Detail of the ear of the God of Amiens

This anomalous ear on the Amiens statuette is most commonly identified as a deer's ear,[2] but has also been thought to represent the ear of a horse, goat, donkey, wolf, or bull.[6]: 96–97  The divergence between its representation on the Besançon and Amiens statuettes has led Lucien Lerat to suggest that the choice of animal to model the deity's ear was arbitrary.[4]: 100 

The interpretation of the god's attributes are far from clear.[4]: 101  The animal attribute is typical insofar as Celtic gods often link divinity with the natural world.[3]: 193  Waldemar Deonna [fr] has suggested the god's animal ear arose from the anthropomorphisation of a prior animal god,[6]: 86  though Simone Deyts has tempered this by noting that we have no evidence of any such historical process taking place.[12]: 47–48  Deonna has also drawn on comparative evidence from Celtic as well as Christian contexts to argue that the statues are intended to represent a god whose animal ear allows him to hear the supplications of his worshippers.[6]: 98–99  Fernand Benoit [fr] has pointed out that these attributes could express a number of conceptual oppositions: the (mortal) human ear against the (divine) deer's ear; the deer (good) against the serpent (evil); the grape and animal ear (drunkenness) against the serpent (prudence).[8]: 123 

Benoit has also pointed out that the attributes of snake and grape connect this god with two bronze statuettes of Epona,[8]: 121  a female Gallo-Roman god revered as the protector of horses.[13]: 9  One of these statuettes was found in Reims[f] and the other in Maaseik.[g] Both are of Epona astride a horse, with a bunch of grapes in her right hand, but only the Reims statuette has a (fragmentary) serpent in its left hand. The attribute in the Maaseik statue's left hand is now missing. Neither have any indication of an animal ear.[8]: 121 

Among those who interpret the animal ear as that of a deer, some connection with the horned Celtic stag-god Cernunnos has been suggested,[4]: 101  but what the relationship between the two gods is supposed to be is unclear.[10]: 46  Cernunnos is associated with (horned) serpents;[10]: 14  he is depicted on the Gundestrup cauldron grasping a serpent in his left hand.[4]: 100 

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Rigollot: "objet si rare en archéologie, qu'il serait peut-être difficile d'en citer un second exemple".[1]: 303 
  2. ^ Found in 1849 in Besançon during construction on a new aqueduct along Rue Pasteur [fr]. The statuette is now at the Museum of Besançon.[4]: 98  It was previously deemed (by Auguste Castan [fr]) to be an allegorical representation of temperance opposed to drunkenness.[7]: 144–145 [8]: 123 
  3. ^ Found in 1878 in Lantilly during stonework in the cemetery of the local church.[9]: 282  It is now at the Musée Rolin.[10]: 49 
  4. ^ Pierre Lambrechts has compared the God of Lantilly to the tricephalic bronze statuette called the God of Etang sur Arroux (which is perhaps a depiction of Cernunnos). This statue has two serpents, each with fish tails and ram heads. Lambrechts has therefore conjectured that the God of Lantilly's serpent had a ram head too.[11]: 46–47 
  5. ^ One dissenter from this position is Fernand Benoit [fr], who argues that a Celtic deity would be unlikely to have such monstrous and asymmetrical attributes.[8]: 121  Waldemar Deonna [fr] argues that these objections are unfounded, since various deities in Celtic religion (such as the tricephalic god, Lugus) could equally be considered monstrous.[6]: 99 
  6. ^ Illustrated in Magnen 1953, pl. 8. It is now at the Cabinet des Médailles.[13]: 44 
  7. ^ Illustrated in Magnen 1953, pl. 5. It is now at the Art & History Museum, Brussels.[13]: 45 

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Rigollot, Marcel Jérôme (1846). "Mémoire sur une petite statuette de Midas". Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires de Picardie. VIII: 303–316.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Mahéo, Noël (1990). "136. Statuette d'une divinité à l'oreille de cervidé". In Viéville, Dominic (ed.). Les collections archéologiques du musée de Picardie. Vol. 1. Amiens: Trois Cailloux. p. 236. ISBN 978-2-402-42576-6.
  3. ^ a b c d Bayard, Didier; Massy, Jean Luc (1983). "Populations et mentalités". Amiens romain: Samarobriva Ambianorum. Revue archéologique de Picardie. Vol. NS 2. Amiens. pp. 167–200.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Lerat, Lucien (1950). "Trois petits bronzes gallo-romains du Musée de Besançon" (PDF). Gallia. 8: 95–104. doi:10.3406/galia.1950.1271. JSTOR 43612908.
  5. ^ Lussien-Maisonneuve, Marie-Josèphe (1984). "Quelques observations sur les bronzes figurés de la province romaine de Belgique". Revue du Nord. 66 (260): 281–296. doi:10.3406/rnord.1984.4004.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Deonna, Waldemar (1956). "Le dieu gallo-romain à l'oreille animale". L'Antiquité classique. 25 (1): 85–99. doi:10.3406/antiq.1956.3282.
  7. ^ Castan, Auguste (1889). Histoire et description des musées de la ville de Besançon. Inventaire des Richesses d'art de la France. Paris: E. Pron.
  8. ^ a b c d e Benoit, Fernand (1954). L'héroïsation équestre. Publications des Annales de la Faculté des Lattres Aix-en-Provence: Nouvelle série. Vol. 7. Paris: Editions Ophrys.
  9. ^ a b Espérandieu, Émile (1907). Recueil général des bas-reliefs de la Gaule romaine. Vol. 3. Paris: Imprimiere National.
  10. ^ a b c d e Bober, Phyllis Fray (January 1951). "Cernunnos: Origin and Transformation of a Celtic Divinity". American Journal of Archaeology. 55 (1): 13–51. doi:10.2307/501179. JSTOR 501179.
  11. ^ Lambrechts, Pierre (1942). Contributions à l'étude des divinités celtiques. Bruges: De Tempel.
  12. ^ Deyts, Simone (1992). Images des dieux de la Gaule. Paris: Editions Errance.
  13. ^ a b c Magnen, René (1953). Épona: Déesse gauloise des chevaux protectrice des cavaliers. Bordeaux: Delmas.

Further reading

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  • Mahéo, N. Archéologie gallo-romaine. Amiens: Musée de Picardie (1983), pp. 50-51
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