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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#0334

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260 The Solar Wheel in Greece

hung from the ceiling of a palace, still less from that of a temple1.
And why—we may pertinently ask—is the rest of the supposed
chariot never shown2 ? A wheel can perhaps serve on occasion as
a tachygraphic sign for a chariot3. But the painters of these great
Apulian vases would surely sometimes have represented the vehicle

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Fig. 188.

as a whole had that been their meaning. It is therefore permissible
to conclude that the wheels depending from the roof of temple
and palace are rather to be interpreted as magic wheels of a

1 Raoul-Rochette loc. cit. adduces Paus. 2. 14. 4 rod 8e 'AvaKr6pov Kakov/xevov irpbs r£
6p6(f>Lp IleXoTros apfxa \tyovaiv avaKeiffdai. But J. G. Frazer translates : ' On the roof of
what is called the Anactorum stands a chariot which they say is the chariot of Pelops.'
And, if the 'Avcucropov at Keleai resembled that at Eleusis (cp. Paus. 2. 14. 1), this may
well be right.

2 On an Apulian amphora from Ruvo at St. Petersburg (Stephani Vasensamml. St.
Petersburg!. 215 ff. no. 422 and in the Compte-rendu St. Pet. 1863 p. 267 n. 4, Mon. d. Inst.
v pi. 11 f., Ann. d. Inst. 1849 xxi. 240 ff., Overbeck Gall. her. Bildto. i. 472 ff. Atlas
pi. 20, 4, Reinach Be"p. Vases i. 138, 3, 139), which shows the ransoming of Hektor's
body (Ann. d. Inst. 1866 xxxviii. 246), a chariot is apparently suspended in the back-
ground along with a pair of greaves, a shield, and a pilos; but, though the scene is
probably laid before Achilles' hut, there is no indication of architecture.

3 E.g. the wheel of Myrtilos, on which however see supra p. 225 n. 4, or the wheel
in the exergue of a Syracusan coin signed by Euainetos (Brit. A/us. Cat. Coins Sicily
pp. 166, 173, G. F. Hill Coins of Ancient Sicily London 1903 p. 63, Head Hist, mem.2
p. 175), or the wheel held by a reclining female figure named Via Traiana on coins of
Trajan (Rasche lex. Nu?n. x. 1116, Stevenson—Smith—Madden Diet. Bom. Coins
p. 858 fig.), or that held by a figure commemorating the Circus-games of 121 a.d. on a
medallion and coins of Hadrian (Gnecchi Medagl. Bom. iii. 16 no. 56 pi. 144, 5, Rasche
op. cit. i. 6486°. Suppl. i. 691 f., Stevenson—Smith—Madden op. cit. p. 46 f. fig.).
 
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