• The Cernunnos-type antlered figure or horned god, on the Gundestrup Cauldron, on display, at the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen.
  • The name Cernunnos is the name given to the horned god featured in Roman-era, mostly in Gaul and Iberia.
  • The figure is accompanied by sun imagery substantiating claims by some scholars that Cernunnos was a sun deity.
  • The Pillar of the Boatmen is the only place where this horned god appears in tandem with the name “Cernunnos” from that time period.
  • Though Cernunnos himself appeared primarily in Ancient Gaul, similar characters have been found around the world, including in other Celtic regions.
  • The religious beliefs of the pagan leader known as Cernunnos inspired the depiction of Satan in various Christian works of art and heroes in Ireland and Wales...
  • Folklore tells tales of Cernunnos presiding cross-legged over gatherings of snakes, dogs, elk, wolves and other beasts, all in calm communion with each other.
  • CernunnosWP (ケルヌンノス, Kerununnosu?) is a God from Celtic mythology that appears within the English Lostbelt in Fate/Grand Order.
  • As the Horned God of Celtic polytheism, Cernunnos is often associated with the deity of animals, fertility, life, and even wealth (in his syncretic Romano-Celtic form...
  • Arguably the best-known deity in their pantheon is Cernunnos, the sylvan antlered god that likely has origins that far predate the emergence of the Celts.