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

DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14695#0301

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Triptolemos

229

she approached Eleusis1, and in this way she quitted it again2.
Art follows suit. Demeter in her snake-
chariot appears first on Roman denarii of
the moneyer M. Volteius about the year
88 B.C.3, then on those of C. Vibius Pansa
in 43 B.C.4, and not infrequently on late
Greek coins5. Occasionally she holds
corn-ears and a sceptre6, or a poppy-
head and a sceptre7, more often a couple
of torches (fig. 168)8, rarely corn-ears and
torches too9. The scene of her quest was
common on sarcophagi of Roman date;

1 Ov. met. 5. 642 ff., fast. 4. 497 f. In Orph. h. Dem. Eleus. 40. 14^ Demeter
'EXevcriuia has a snaky chariot.

2 Ov. fast. 4. 561 f. In Ov. met. 8. 794 ff. Ceres sends an Oread in her snake-
chariot to fetch Fames from Scythia. But the mode of conveyance may be a touch due
to Ovid himself.

3 Babelon Monn. rep. rom. ii. 566 no. 3.

4 Id. ib. ii. 545 f. no. 17.

5 See Overbeck op. cit. pp. 502 f., 660 f. Miinztaf. 8, 38—40, 9, 17—-21.

6 So on late bronze coins of Athens {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Attica etc. p. 90 pi. 15,
15, p. 91 pi. 15, 17, cp. p. 89). The earlier bronze coins of Eleusis, which are said to
represent ' Demeter or Triptolemos seated 1. in winged car drawn by two serpents, and
holding in r. two ears of corn' {ib. Attica etc. p. 112 pi. 20, 1), show Triptolemos rather
than Demeter (Overbeck op. cit. p. 581 ff., Head Hist, num.2 p. 391 : yet see E. Beule
Les monnaies d'Athenes Paris 1858 p. 289 ff.).

7 So on an imperial coin of Nikomedeia in Bithynia (Imhoof-Blumer Gr. Miinzen
p. 81 no. 135).

8 So on imperial coins of Thessalonike {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Macedonia etc. p. 117),
Hadrianopolis in Thrace (Overbeck op. cit. p. 661), Kretia-Flaviopolis {Brit. Mus. Cat.
Coins Pontus etc. p. 137 pi. 29, 4, Waddington—Babelon—Remach. Monn. gr. d'As. Min.
i. 334 no. 8 pi. 54, 2, 338 no. 30), Nikaia in Bithynia (Overbeck op. cit. p. 660), Erythrai
in Ionia {id. ib., Imhoof-Blumer Gr. Miinzen p. 117 no. 296 pi. 13, 19), Magnesia ad
Maeandrum {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Ionia p. 165 pi. 19, 8), the Ionian League {ib. Ionia
p. 16), Kyzikos {ib. Mysia p. 47 pi. 12, 12), Ankyra in Galatia (Overbeck op. cit. p. 661
Miinztaf. 9, 21), Amorion {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Phrygia p. 54), Brouzos {ib. Phrygia
p. 114 pi. 14, 6, Imhoof-Blumer Monn. gr. p. 394 no. 6g=Choix de monn. gr. 1871
pi. 5, 187), Hierapolis in Phrygia (Overbeck op. cit. p. 660), Pessinous {id. ib. Miinztaf.
9, 20, Imhoof-Blumer Gr. Munzen p. 229 f. no. 762 = id. and O. Keller Tier- und
Pfianzenbilder auf Munzen und Gemmen Leipzig 1889 p. 73 no. 31 pi. 12), Apollonis in
Lydia (Head Hist, num.1 p. 548), Gordus-Iulia {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Lydia p. 96
pi. 10, 6), Magnesia ad Sipylum {ib. Lydia p. 152), Maionia {ib. Lydia p. 134 pi. 14, 8),
Nysa {ib. Lydia p. 178, Overbeck op. cit. p. 660 Miinztaf. 9, 17), Sardeis {Brit. Mus.
Cat. Coins Lydia p. 254), Stratonikeia (Overbeck op. cit. p. 660), Kelenderis {Brit. Mus.
Cat. Coins Lycaonia etc. p. 58 pi. 10, 14, Imhoof-Blumer Monn. gr. p. 351 no. 19),
Korakesion {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Lycaonia etc. p. xxxv n. 6).

The goddess has one torch only on imperial coins of Kretia-Flaviopolis (Waddington—
Babelon—Reinach op. cit. i. 337 no. 25 pi. 54, 10), Claudio-Seleucia {Brit. Mus. Cat.
Coins Lycia etc. p. 254).

9 So on imperial coins of Hyrkanis {Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Lydia p. 125 pi. 13, 6),
Sardeis {ib. Lydia p. 273).
 
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