Mogons or Moguns was a god worshipped in Roman Britain and in Gaul. The main evidence is from altars dedicated to the god by Roman soldiers, but the deity is not a native Italic one. It appears to be Celtic. Inscriptional spellings include Mogetios, Mogounos, Mogti, Mounti, Mogont, Mogunt. Not all of these words are necessarily in the nominative case. For example, Mounti is a dative, probably *Mogunti, from a hypothetical nominative, *Moguns, of a back-formed Latin stem, *Mogunt-.
Etymologically the name can be seen to be the same as the English word Might personified. It has been translated by others as greatness or the great one. The fact that ordinary soldiers adopted him tends to support a "powerful" or "effective" interpretation rather than self-glorification.
Altar-stones raised to Mogons have been recovered in the United Kingdom, such as the stones found at the following locations. The number is the catalog number of the artifact and the name in parentheses is the word as it appears on the stone, not necessarily (and probably not) in the nominative case. Most are datives, to be translated as "to" the god:
I left my gal in Kansas City
Left the crying in the rain
I told her that I made my mind up
I didn?t want to see her again
What makes the night so lonely
What makes the night so long
why I guess its just because I am a man
That?s done a good women wrong
I can?t eat
I can?t sleep
All I can do is cry
All I can do is cry
I told her that she was a driver
Told her that she played around
But I was just a lying man
Tryin? to hide the tracks she had found
Gonna catch my self a flier
One was Kansas City bound
I'm goin' looking for my baby
Good Lord, I hope she?s still around
I can?t eat
I can?t sleep
All I can do is cry
All I can do is cry
I can?t eat
I can?t sleep
All I can do is cry