Camillus

deity intermediate Etruscan single tradition · 2

Camillus is an epithet of Hermes-Turms, meaning ‘servant’ (i.e. of the other deities). Bernard Combet-Farnoux interprets comments by Servius and Macrobius as indicating that “Hermes-Turms” had the epithet Camillus.

↻ synthesized from 2 sources

When

First attested
700 BCE
Attested period
-700 – 100
Historical notes
Etruscan civilization flourished from the 7th century BCE to the 1st century CE.

Relationships

enemy of
Brennus

Expand to full subgraph →

Sources

wikipedia (2)

Source passages

“Bernard Combet-Farnoux interprets comments by Servius and Macrobius as indicating that “Hermes-Turms” had the epithet Camillus, meaning ‘servant’ (i.e. of the other deities).”

#14701 · extracted by google/gemini-2.0-flash-001

“The ghosts of the Gallic leader Brennus and his Roman antagonist Camillus discuss the long-standing conflicts between their peoples... The ghosts of Brennus and Camillus return with the god Mercury.”

#38019 · extracted by anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5