The deity's name is variously attested as Ataegina, Ataecina, Adaecina and Adaegina,[2] among other spellings.[3][4] Her name appears in conjunction to a place named Turibriga or Turobriga (see below).[5]
Etymology
Celtic hypothesis
The name Ataegina is most commonly derived from a Celtic source: according to Cristina Maria Grilo Lopes and Juan Olivares Pedreño, French scholar D'Arbois de Jubainville and Portuguese scholar José Leite de Vasconcelos interpreted her name as a compound from *ate- 'repetition, re-' *-genos '(to be) born'. Thus, her name would mean 'The Reborn One' ("renascida", in the original).[6][7][8]
Others propose a connection to the domain of nocturnal or underworld deities: Gabriel Sopeña [es] tentatively saw a connection with Irishadaig 'night', which may indicate a relation to the underworld.[9] Similarly, in a 1998 article, Eugenio Luján, based on the epigraphic evidence available until then, supposed that Adaecina is the original spelling of her name, and related it to Irish adaig,[a] and both deriving from a Proto-Celtic*adakī. This form would account for both words, but Luján refrained from offering a definitive etymology.[12]
Italian linguist Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel argues for a Celtic etymology, from *atakī ('night'), from an earlier *at-ak-ī ('interval'). Thus, de Bernardo proposes, her name means "the one of the night".[13] In a later article, she describes Ataecina as "the goddess of the nighttime", and derives her name from *Atakī-nā 'the divine (night)time'.[14]
Other hypotheses
That said, her presence in decidedly non-Indo-European Iberian regions suggest that she may have an older, indigenous origin, in which case her name's etymology is more likely Iberian, Aquitanian or Tartessian.[15]
In his late 19th-century study, José Leite de Vasconcelos, while proposing a Celtic reading of her name, also supposed her origins as a Celticized indigenous deity.[16] Spanish historian José María Blázquez Martínez [es] supported the idea of Ataegina's indigenous character, while remarking that a Celtic interpretation of her name as 'reborn' is "inviable", and that her connection to Irish 'night' is "difficult".[17]
Her name appears with adjective Turobrigensis, which seems to indicate a place called Turibriga or Turobriga.[20][21] Similar epigraphic attestations read Turibrige, [T]urubricae and Turibri, which led professor Amílcar Guerra to indicate a form *Turibris.[22][23]
This place is interpreted by scholarship to mean the main center of her cult,[24][25][26] but its precise location is unknown. Classical author Pliny indicated it belonged to Celtic Beturia.[21]
Functions
Epigraphs from the Badajoz region associate the goddess with the Roman Proserpina (analogous to Greek Persephone),[7][27] which would make her a goddess presiding over spring and seasonality, echoing the "reborn" derivation of the name,[18][8] or connect her to the Underworld.[28] In that regard, a dedication etched in marble was found in Augusta Emérita: the propitiator prays to Dea Ataecina Turibrig(ensis) Proserpina for her to avenge the theft of some pieces of clothing.[29]
^Sopeña, Gabriel (2005). "Celtiberian Ideologies and Religion". E-Keltoi: Journal of Interdisciplinary Celtic Studies. 6: 348. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
^Bernardo Stempel, Patrizia de. Nominale Wortbildung des älteren Irischen: Stammbildung und Derivation. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2011 [1999]. p. 80. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110931556
^Bernardo Stempel, Patrizia de; Hainzmann, Manfred, and Mathieu, Nicolas. “Celtic and Other Indigenous Divine Names Found in the Italian Peninsula.” In: Théonymie Celtique, Cultes, Interpretatio - Keltische Theonymie, Kulte, Interpretatio. Edited by Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel and Andreas Hofeneder, 1st ed. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2013. p. 80. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv8mdn28.8.
^"... keltische Göttin der nächtlichen Zeit Ataecina..." Stempel, Patrizia de Bernardo. "Keltische Äquivalente klassischer Epitheta und andere sprachliche und nicht-sprachliche Phänomene im Rahmen der sogenannten ‚interpretatio Romana‘". In: Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie 61, no. 1 (2014): 34 and footnote nr. 109. https://doi.org/10.1515/zcph.2014.003
^Blázquez, José Mª. Arte Y Religión En El Mediterráneo Antiguo. Ediciones Cátedra, 2008. pp. 141-142.
^ abJuan Manuel Abascal, Las inscripciones latinas de Santa Lucía del Trampal (Alcuéscar, Cáceres) y el culto de Ataecina en Hispania, Archivo Español de Arqueología 68: 31-105 (1995)
^Diáz, Alonso Rodríguez; Navascués, Juan Javier Enríquez. Extremadura tartésica: arqueología de un proceso periférico. Barcelona: Bellaterra, 2001. p. 259. ISBN84-7290-174-2.
^"Histoire et archéologie de la Péninsule ibérique antique, chronique VI: 1993-1997". In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 102, 2000, n°1-2. pp. 186. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3406/rea.2000.4794; www.persee.fr/doc/rea_0035-2004_2000_num_102_1_4794
^ abFrías, Manuel Salinas de; Cortés, Juana Rodríguez. "Ciudad y Cultos en Lusitania durante la época Antonina". In: Actas del II Congreso Internacional de Historia Antigua: la Hispania de los Antoninos (98-180). Valladolid, Spain: Universidad de Valladolid, Secretariado de Publicaciones e Intercambio Editorial, 2005. p. 356.
^Ehmig, Ulrike. “Proserpina: Wandlerin Zwischen Den Welten”. In: Zeitschrift Für Papyrologie Und Epigraphik 200 (2016): 307–308. http://www.jstor.org/stable/26603891.
^Tomlin, Roger. "Cursing A Thief In Iberia And Britain". In: Magical Practice in the Latin West. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2013. pp. 247-249. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004179042.i-676.55
Bibliography
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Olivares Pedreño, Juan Carlos. Los dioses de la hispania céltica. Universitat d´Alacant / Universidad de Alicante, Servicio de Publicaciones: Real Academia de la Historia. 2002. pp. 247–249. ISBN84-95983-00-1.
Abascal Palazón, Juan Manuel. "Ataecina". In: Luís Raposo (coord.). Religiões da Lusitania. Loquuntur saxa. Lisboa, Museu Nacional de Arqueologia: Ministério da Cultura, Instituto Português de Museus, 2002. pp. 53–60.
Hernando, Domingo Portela. "El culto a Ataecina en la Península Ibérica". In: Homenaje de Talavera y sus tierras a Don Fernando Jiménez de Gregorio: Talavera, 1998. Coord. por César Pacheco Jiménez, 1998, pp. 121–130. ISBN84-88439-58-X.
Jordan, Michael. Encyclopedia of Gods, Kyle Cathie Limited, 2002.
Simón, Francisco Marco (2011). ""Duagena, Ataecina": dos divinidades mencionadas en contextos mágicos del Occidente hispano". MHNH: Revista internacional de investigación sobre magia y astrología antiguas. 11: 45–58. ISSN1578-4517..
González-Conde Puente, María Pilar (2010 [1988]). «Bassus Turobrigensis Y La inscripción De Ataecina En Caleruela (Toledo)». In: Studia Historica: Historia Antigua 6 (febrero): pp. 131–132. https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/0213-2052/article/view/6231.