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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#0694

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Zeus Dolichatos and Iupiter Dolichenus 611

DolicJienus, Best and Greatest,' and of ' Iuno the Queen' respec-
tively1. Two more, from Caerleon-on-Usk in Monmouthshire2 and
from Netherby in Cumberland3, again link this Iupiter with his Iuno.

The solar aspect of Iupiter Dolichenus and his association with
a female partner are alike supported by the extant monuments of
his cult. These are fairly numerous and for the most part represent
the god as a Roman soldier in full armour. He commonly, how-
ever, wears a Phrygian cap instead of a helmet. His raised right
hand holds a double axe, his left hand grasps a thunderbolt. By
a device already familiar to us4 he is shown standing on the back of
his sacred animal, the bull, which always appears to move from left
to right.

This type occurs sometimes in the round5. For example, about
the year 1648 A.D. a marble statuette, now preserved at Stuttgart,
was found in the harbour of Marseille, where it had sunk in some
Roman shipwreck. It portrays the god as a beardless warrior
erect on the bull's back. His usual attributes are missing; but an
eagle is perched on the ground beneath the bull, and a conical
pillar rises from the ground behind the warrior's back. The base
is inscribed To the Dolichenian god (fig. 480)6. Again, a marble
statuette found at Szalan-kemen, probably the site of Acumincum
a Roman station in Lower Pannonia, and purchased for the Vienna
collection in 1851, repeats the theme with some variations. The
god is here bearded and wears a Phrygian cap. His breast-plate
is decorated with an eagle. Another eagle is perched between the

1 Corp. inscr. Lat. vi no. 366 = Kan op. cit. p. 73 f. no. 81 —Dessau Inscr. Lat. sel.
no. 4321 : Iovi optimo | maximo Dolichen. | Paezon Aquiliaes | Bassillaes actor | cum
Paezusa filia sua | d. d.

Corp. inscr. Lat. vi no. 365 = Kan op. cit. p. 73 f. no. 81 = Dessau Inscr. Lat. sel.
no. 432ia: Iunoni | reginae | Paezon | Aquiliaes | Bassillaes | actor cum Paezusa | filia
sua d. d. Since Iuno Regina had a temple of her own on the Aventine (H. Jordan—
C. Huelsen Topographie der Stadt Rom im Alterthum Berlin 1907 i. 3. 165 ff., H. Kiepert
et C. Huelsen Formae tirbis Romae antiquae^ Berolini 1912 p. 18), it seems probable
that the new-comer Iupiter Dolichenus here claimed to be the consort of this ancient
goddess, whose temple had been dedicated by the dictator Camillus.

2 Corp. inscr. Lat. vii no. 98 = Kan op. cit: p. 90 no. 112 (on an altar found in
1653 a.d., but now lost) Iovi o. m. Dolichu[no et] | I[un]oni [C(ornelius)?] Aemilianus
Calpurnius | Rufilianus [v(ir) c(larissimus), l]eg(atus) | Augustorum, | monitu.

:i Corp. inscr. Lat. vii no. 956 (on a small altar): I(ovi) o(ptimo) m(aximo) ] D(olicheno),
Iu[n(oni) r(eginae)?, M]er(curio) sanct[o, F]ortuna[e v(otum)] m(erito)? or else Fortu-
natus v. s. 1. m.?

4 Supra p. 606 f. fig. 478.

5 Reinach Rip. Stat. ii. 21 nos. 2—5, Brit. Mus. Cat. Sculpture iii. 6 f. no. 1532
fig- 3-

6 Corp. inscr. Lat. xii no. 403 = Kan op. cit. p. 98 no. 132 : deo Dolichenio [ Oct(avius)
Paternus ex iussu eius pro salute | sua et suorum. On this statuette see further Gustos
Seidl loc. cit. xii. 35 f. pi. 2, Overbeck Gr. Kunstmyth. Zeus p. 271 f.

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