Paganus
Paganus is a Latin term with several related meanings in classical and late antique texts. In its earliest sense, paganus described someone who was rural, rustic, or a country-dweller, and as a noun it could mean a civilian or layperson, often contrasted with military or urban elites. The word is derived from pagus, meaning a district or country, and it historically carried the sense of belonging to the countryside rather than to the city or to the early Christian communities.
With the spread of Christianity in the Roman Empire, paganus acquired a new religious sense. Christian writers
From Latin, paganus passed into the Romance languages and into English as pagan, giving rise to the
Paganus thus traces a path from a simple geographic or social label to a religious category, and