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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#0564

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The Labyrinth at Knossos 485

now in the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge, represents an un-
known man wearing a Labyrinth of the sort on his breast1. A small
Labyrinth (19^ inches across) still exists incised upon a porch
pier of Lucca cathedral (fig. 349)2. The central group of Theseus
and the Minotaur has all but vanished under the pressure of
countless tracing fingers, but the adjoining inscription attests the
designer's meaning. Similar examples are, or were, in the church
of S. Michele at Pavia (s. xi), at Aix in Provence, on the walls
of Poitiers cathedral. Labyrinths of larger size are not very

Fig- 35°-

uncommon in continental churches3. A fine specimen, composed
of grey and white marble, decorates the middle of the nave in

Romani subjugaverunt orbem terrarum. Habeat et in diarodino laberinthum fabrefactum
ex auro et margaritis, in quo sit Minotaurus digitum ad os tenens ex smaragdo factus,
quia sicut non valet quis laberinthum scrutare, ita non debet consilium dominatoris
propalare. I am indebted for this and for several of the following references to a
valuable article by the Rev. E. Trollope on ' Notices of Ancient and Mediaeval Laby-
rinths' in The Archaeological Journal 1858 xv. 216—235.

1 F. R. Earp A descriptive Catalogtie of the Pictures in the Fitzwilliam Museum
Cambridge 1902 p. 14 f. no. 133 fig. Mr A. S. F. Gow, Fellow of Trinity College,
Cambridge, kindly drew my attention to this interesting picture.

2 J. Durand in Didron Annales Archeologiques Paris 1857 xvii. 124^ with pi. The
inscription runs: hie quern Creticus edit Dedalus est laberinthus, | de quo nullus vadere
quivit qui fuit intus, | ni Theseus gratis Adriane (sic) stamine iutus. The facade of the
cathedral dates from 1204.

3 W. Meyer ' Ein Labyrinth mit Versen' in the Sitzungsber. d. kais. bayr. Akad. d.
Wiss. Phil.-hist. Classe 1882 ii. 267—300 enumerates nine examples (ib. p. 283 ff.
Chartres, Poitiers, St Quentin, Amiens 1288 A.D., Arras, St Omer, Sens, Reims
c. 1300 A.D., Bayeux in s. xiv) and brings them into connexion with Labyrinths drawn in
mediaeval manuscripts. E. Krause Die Trojaburgen Nordeuropas Glogau 1893 p. 88 ff.
(' Kirchen-Labyrinthe') figures four (Sens, St Omer, St Quentin, Bayeux) after E. Bosc
Dictionnaire raisonne" d"1 Architecture Paris 1879.
 
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