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- Clota abstract "In Celtic mythology, Clota was the patron goddess of the River Clyde. Perhaps worshiped by the local Welsh-speaking Damnonii tribe who held the territory which later was to become the Kingdom of Strathclyde. The Damnonii allied themselves with Rome who recorded and mapped the Clota estuary. During the Antonine period the Romans built the Antonine Wall from the Forth to the Clyde and created a causeway stretching across the 'Clota' which linked the forts at Bishopton, Greenock and Largs, to the Antonine Wall.".
- Clota wikiPageExternalLink clota.
- Clota wikiPageID "86244".
- Clota wikiPageLength "766".
- Clota wikiPageOutDegree "7".
- Clota wikiPageRevisionID "655723331".
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink Antonine_Wall.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink Category:Goddesses_of_the_ancient_Britons.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sea_and_river_goddesses.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink Celtic_mythology.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink Damnonii.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Strathclyde.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLink River_Clyde.
- Clota wikiPageWikiLinkText "Clota".
- Clota wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Celt-myth-stub.
- Clota wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Celtic_mythology_(ancient).
- Clota wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Clota subject Category:Goddesses_of_the_ancient_Britons.
- Clota subject Category:Sea_and_river_goddesses.
- Clota hypernym Goddess.
- Clota type MythologicalFigure.
- Clota comment "In Celtic mythology, Clota was the patron goddess of the River Clyde. Perhaps worshiped by the local Welsh-speaking Damnonii tribe who held the territory which later was to become the Kingdom of Strathclyde. The Damnonii allied themselves with Rome who recorded and mapped the Clota estuary.".
- Clota label "Clota".
- Clota sameAs Q5135536.
- Clota sameAs m.0lv55.
- Clota sameAs Q5135536.
- Clota wasDerivedFrom Clota?oldid=655723331.
- Clota isPrimaryTopicOf Clota.