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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#0653

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570 The Bull and the Sun in Syria

on its stalk. On the sides of the case are two thunderbolts. And
to right and left of the god are the remains of his bulls.

A third stele, found at ''Ain-Djouch, a well-pool to the east
of Bctalbek and published by O. Puchstein in 1902 (fig. 437)1,
again shows the god standing with uplifted lash between two bulls,
Immediately in front of him is a herm, attesting his intimate con-
nexion with Hermes2. To right and left of the monument is a
bull with a winged thunderbolt above it. Adad3, Zeus, and Iupiter
could alike claim to be storm-gods.

Fig. 437-

Somewhat more elaborate is a stele of white marble, which came
to light at Marseille in 1838 and is now in the Musee Calvet at
Avignon (pi. xxxiii)4. Round the neck of the god is a pendant

' Adad's finger' {not. hist. 37. 186 Adadu nephros sive renes, eiusdem oculus, digitus;
deus et hie colitur a Syris).

1 O. Puchstein in the Jahrb. d. kais. deutsch. arch. Inst. 1902 xvii. 102 f. fig., id.
Fuhrer durch die Ruinen von Bdalbek Berlin 1905 p. 12 f. fig. 4.

2 Several little lead figures found by the peasants in this locality likewise represent
the Heliopolitan Zeus with Hermes, also Dionysos, and Helios or his Syrian counterpart
(O. Puchstein in the Jahrb. d. kais. deutsch. arch. Inst. 1902 xvii. 102).

3 Supra p. 553 n. 3, infra p. 5766°.

4 Height o'55m. H. Bazin in the Rev. Arch. 1886 ii. 257 ff. pi. 26 published this
relief as a Roman copy of Artemis Dlktynna. P. Wolters in the Anv. Journ. Arch. 1890
vi. 65 ff. fig. 14 was the first to detect in it Zeus 'HXioiroXiTTjs. But R. Dussaud in the
Rev. Arch. 1903 i. 347, 350—353 fig. 11 = id. Notes de mythologie syrienne Paris 1903
pp. 30, 33—36 has contributed most to our understanding of its details. He points out
that the neck-ornament is not composed of two dolphins (so Bondurand in the Comptes
rendus de IAcad, des inscr. et belles-lettres 1901 p. 863), but of the solar disk with its
tiraeus-snakes; that the herm does not rest on the lion's head and cannot therefore be
the female consort of the god (so W. Gurlitt in the Arch.-ep. Mitth. 1891 xiv. 123), but
is rather to be identified with some such god as Ba'al-Marqod, ' Lord of the Dance'
 
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