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Cook, Arthur B.
Zeus: a study in ancient religion (Band 1): Zeus god of the bright sky — Cambridge, 1914

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14695#0177

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116 Development in the meaning of Olympos

summit of Mount Olympos as 'heaven1.5 Modern peasants call it
'the three peaks of Heaven2.' And a primitive notion that has
left traces of itself in almost every country of Europe regards
a mountain as the natural abode of souls3.

Mount Ide in the Troad, which also bore the name of Olympos4,
was likewise supposed to rise into the aither. Aischylos in his
Niobe mentions Tantalos and his family as—

near akin to gods
And nigh to Zen, men who on Ide's height
Have built an altar of Ancestral Zeus
In aither and still vaunt the blood divine5.

A ! ' oAYM P J A*.

A £ TON YYIP E TH Aior A V r EA 0 NK^A P TPM' AiH*$
A E NAoMPOA El E111K /J, IA OANATo l r l o E o; r i
, A<t> o I TOl AG AN ATOI |<AIArHPA°IAE.NAoITE

BnMoioIOiriEPEYSTEMENozkTIXEt-'APTEMiiiilxfi'

.....- ' .-- /

Fig. 86.

Zeus was worshipped under the title Olympios not only at the
foot of the Macedonian Mount Olympos6, at Pisa near the Elean
Olympos7, and on the slopes of the Mysian Olympos8, but also far

1 Solin. 8. 5 primum excellenti vertice tantus attollitur, ut summa eius caelum accolae
vocent, Lact. Plac. in Stat. Theb. 3. 262 Olympi ardua. quod caelum dixere ideo, quia

apex eius omnibus invisibilis est, Eustath. in Od. p. 1550, 51 f.
ot 5e 7raXatot cpacri /cat eirovpdviov KaXetcrdai ttjv tov MaKedovwou
'QXvpLirov Kopv<pT)v. The combination of ovpavds and"0\v/utos
occurs in //. 1. 497, 5. 750, 8. 394, 16. 364, 19. 128.

2 Supra p. 114.

3 The latest (1912) article on the subject is E. Mogk
' Bergkult' in Hoops Keallex. p. 2551".

4 Sttpra p. 100 n. 8. 5 Aisch. Niobe frag. 162 Nauck2.

6 Sttpra p. 102 n. 4.

7 As lord of Olympia and patron of the famous Olympian
games (Roscher Lex. Myth. iii. 844).

8 Mnaseas frag. 30 {Frag. hist. Gr. iii. 154 Muller) ap. schol. //. 20. 234. A copper
coin of Prousa ad Olympum (at Berlin), struck in the reign of Commodus, has for its
reverse type a bearded god reclining on the Mysian Olympos (fig. 85). He has a mantle
wrapped about his legs, and his left arm rests on the rock. Trees and a gorge with a
 
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