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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#0673

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5go Zeus (Adad) at Dion, Rhosos, etc.

(e) Zeus (Adad) at Dion, Rhosos, etc.

Heliopolis and Hierapolis were not the only towns in which the
Syrian Zeus was worshipped as a bull-god1. To Dion, near Pella
in Koile Syria, belongs a copper coin of Geta, showing a god who
stands erect with a couple of humped bulls recumbent at his feet.
He wears a chitdn and a himdtion. On his head, which is horned,
is a kdlathos. His right hand grasps a sceptre tipped by an eagle :
on his left rests a Victory holding a wreath (fig. 450)2. A copper
of Rhosos on the Gulf of Issos likewise represents a horned deity,
who stands on a base between two reclining bulls : from his head
rises a crux ansata ; his right hand grasps a thunderbolt, his left an
ear of corn (?) ; and on either side of him are the caps of the
Dioskouroi (fig. 451)3. Gabala, a Syrian coast-town between Lao-
dikeia and Paltos, worshipped a similar deity4. And a unique

Fig. 450. Fig. 451. Fig. 452!

silver tetradrachm of Antiochos xii, now in the Dresden cabinet,
attests the same cult. It has for a reverse type a bearded god
standing on a base of two steps between a couple of recumbent
bulls. He wears a pointed head-dress, a long cliiton with a broad
knotted belt, and a himdtion buckled round his neck. Both hands
are extended, and the left holds a two-leaved ear of corn (fig. 452)5.

1 The deity represented on coins of Neapolis in Samaria (F. de Saulcy Nimismatique
de la terre sainte Paris 1874 p. 250 f. nos. 5—7 and perhaps p. 255 f. nos. 1—3, F. Lajard
Recherches sur le culte, les symboles, les altributs, et les mommients figures de Venus Paris
1837 pi. 3 b, 3 and 4), Eleutheropolis (id. ib. p. 243 no. 2) and Nikopolis in Iudaea
(F. Imhoof-Blumer in the Num. Zeitschr. 1901 p. 13 f.) is the Zeus of Heliopolis {supra
p. 572 n. 1).

'2 F. de Saulcy Numismatique de la terre sainte Paris 1874 p. 383 pi. 19, 9
A€IHN](jON I CEH (in the year 268 of the Pompeian era = 204 a.d.), Brit. Mas.
Cat. Coins Galatia, etc. pp. lxxxv, 303 pi. 38, 4, Head Hist, num? p. 787.

8 Imhoof-Blumer Monn. gr. p. 440 no. 8, Choix de monn. gr?2 pi. 7, 223, Plead
Hist, num.'2 p. 782.

4 F. Imhoof-Blumer in the Journ. Hell. Stud. 1898 xviii. 170 n. 9, citing A. L. Millin
Nouv. gall. myth. p. 89 pi. 14 no. 16 and F. Lajard Recherches sur le culte, les symboles,
les attributs, et les monuments figure's de Venus Paris 1837 pi. 5, 5 (where, however, the
bulls appear as horses).

5 Imhoof-Blumer Monn. gr. p. 437 no. 12 t pi. PI, 15, E. Babelon Les rois de Syrie
Paris 1890 p. clxxiii fig. 39, W. Wroth in the Num. Chrou. Third Series 1890 x. 327 f.,
Head Hist, num.'2 p. 772.
 
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