Elsewhere in Etruria, the god was called Śuri, latinized as Soranus, a cross-cultural deity associated with the underworld.[1]
Consort
When paired with the epithet Mantus, his consort Catha (Etruscan: 𐌀𐌈𐌀𐌂) was also called Mania (Etruscan: 𐌀𐌉𐌍𐌀𐌌); she was a goddess of the dead, spirits and chaos: she was said to be the mother of ghosts, the undead, and other spirits of the night, as well as the Lares and the Manes.
She, along with Mantus, ruled the underworld.
The epithets of this divine couple indicate that they were connected to the Manes, chthonic divinities or spirits of the dead in ancient Roman belief and called man(im) by the Etruscans.[5]
Their names are also linked to Mana Genita and Manius,[6] as well as the GreekMania (or Maniae), goddess of insanity and madness.
Both the Greek and Latin Mania derive from PIE (Proto-Indo-European) *men-, "to think." Cognates include Ancient Greekμένος, ménos, 'mind, thought', and Avestan𐬎𐬫𐬥𐬌𐬀𐬨, mainyu, 'spirit'.