thumb|upright=1.3|Arch sculptured in relief with figures of the war-god Týr|Mars Thincsus with a goose at his feet and two naked goddesses or cupids (maybe the ALaisiagae named Beda and Fimmelena), found near Hadrian's Wall in 1883, now in Chesters Museum. In Romano-British culture and Germanic polytheism, the Alaisiagae deae were Germanic goddesses who deified victory, or, in an alternative interpretation, embodied justice. Their names — possibly meaning the "all‑respected" or "all‑feared" (from Proto West-Germanic *all- + *aizō- "honour, fear") — were mentioned in connection with the syncret
thumb|upright=1.3|Arch sculptured in relief with figures of the war-god Týr|Mars Thincsus with a goose at his feet and two naked goddesses or cupids (maybe the ALaisiagae named Beda and Fimmelena), found near Hadrian's Wall in 1883, now in Chesters Museum. In Romano-British culture and Germanic polytheism, the Alaisiagae deae were Germanic goddesses who deified victory, or, in an alternative interpretation, embodied justice. Their names — possibly meaning the "all‑respected" or "all‑feared" (from Proto West-Germanic *all- + *aizō- "honour, fear") — were mentioned in connection with the syncretic Romano-Celtic god of justice Mars Thincsus or Thingsus, who is commonly associated with the Germanic god *Tīwaz (Old Norse: Týr).
==Centres of worship== The Alaisiagae were Germanic deities who were worshipped by Continental auxiliary troops in Roman Britain. Three votive stones dedicated to them and to Mars Thincsus have been recovered in the United Kingdom at Vercovicium (Housesteads Roman Fort) on Hadrian's Wall in England. Their collective name might have been derived from an unidentified place in the vicinity, possibly referred to in Latin as *Alaisiacum. In the early third-century, a small apsidal well shrine was constructed in the settlement or vicus at the base of Chapel Hill, south of the fort. The fort and the vicus were subsequently excavated from 1954 to 1995 by the archaeologists Eric Birley and his son Robin Birley.
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