Cocidius

[3] Rivet and Smith note that the name may be related to British Celtic cocco-, 'red' (compare Welsh coch and Cornish kogh), suggesting that statues of the god might have been painted red.

[5] Fanocodi was a Roman place-name mentioned in the Ravenna Cosmography for a location close to the Solway Firth; the name has been derived from Fanum Cocidii, or temple of Cocidius, and the place identified with Bewcastle.

[7] This was dubbed the little man and shows a figure with its arms flung wide and legs braced firmly against the ground.

Although the gender is not depicted, the shape and accessories are seemingly male, with a shield in the left hand, a sword in the right, and a scabbard hanging from the belt around his tunic.

Most of these are along the western portion of the Wall, the most spectacular being found at Yardhope, where a figure in bas-relief brandishes spear and shield on a vertical rock-face at the entrance to a small shrine.

The Celtic god Cernunnos on the Gundestrup cauldron
The Celtic god Esus felling a tree on the Pillar of the Boatmen