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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#0597

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Ritual Horns

To the same cvcle of ideas belongs the Mithraic sacrifice of
a bull (fig. 389, 390)1. Mithras—whose myth has been largely

Fig. 389.

1 Figs- 389 and 390 are the front and back of a Mithraic altar-piece found in 1826 in
the Heidenfeld near Heddernheim and now preserved in the Museum at Wiesbaden
(F. Cumont Textes et monuments figuris relatifs attx mysteres de Mithra Bruxelles 1896
ii. 362 ff. fig. 248 pis. 7 f., id. in Roscher Lex. Myth. ii. 3050 ff. figs. 6f., id. in Darem-
berg—Saglio Diet. Ant. iii. 1950 fig. 5088, id. Die Mysterien des Mithra1 trans.
G. Gehrich Leipzig 1911 pi. 3, 1).

Fig- 389 = Front. (a) In a recess representing the cave Mithras slays the bull,
accompanied by dog with collar and crow perched on fluttering mantle. A scorpion nips
the testicles of the bull. A snake would drink from a krater placed below the bull's
belly and guarded by a lion. To right and left are Cautes and Cautopates with raised
and lowered torches—a duplication of Mithras himself (Dionys. Areop. epist. 7 rod
rpiirXaaiov MiOpov). Behind Cautes is a tree with a snake coiled round it. (l>) Above
the cave are the twelve signs of the zodiac, from Aries to Pisces, (c) In the spandrels
Mithras in oriental dress and Phrygian cap shoots an arrow towards another personage
 
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