Satre (Etruscan god)
Etruscan god identified with Saturn From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Satre or Satres[1] was an Etruscan god who appears on the Liver of Piacenza, a bronze model used for haruspicy. He occupies the dark and negative northwest region, and seems to be a "frightening and dangerous god who hurls his lightning from his abode deep in the earth."[2] It is possible that Satre is also referred to with the word "satrs" in the Liber Linteus ("Linen Book," IX.3), the Etruscan text preserved in Ptolemaic Egypt as mummy wrappings.[3]
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Satre is usually identified with the Roman god Saturn, who in a description by Martianus Capella holds a position similar to that of Satre on the liver.[4] The name Satre may be only an Etruscan translation of Saturnus,[5] or Saturnus may derive from the Etruscan;[6] it is also possible that the two deities are unrelated.[7] No image in Etruscan art has been identified as Satre: "this deity remains a riddle."[8]
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