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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#0724

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640 The Significance of the Bull

Autolykos, the father of Odysseus. Odysseus too, or rather his
companions, stole the cattle of the sun-god1. Indeed, the lifting
of them is a commonplace' in Greek mythology2. For instance,
Alkyoneus driving off the oxen of Helios from the Akrokorinthos8
appears to be a doublet of Autolykos driving off the oxen of
Sisyphos from the same mountain-fastness. But whether Tesub

Fig. 500.

is to be identified with Sisyphos or not, it is certain that he was
a sky-god who had the bull as his sacred beast (fig. 500)4. A small

rets (Boas avrov KkeirTovros 7ro\\d/as, reus x^Acus tQiv (3olov eveTTj^e [xoXifiov, o5 xaPaKTVPa
ivrjpfJLCXTe ypd/xfxaTa eKTVirovvra 'AvtoXvkos ^KXeipep.' 6 [xev di] AutoXvkos vlJKrcop airrfKaae
ras /36as, 6 de ~2icrv(pos •fj.ed'' rifxepav tols yeirocn yewpyois e5ei£e ra txvV T&v fio&v KaTrjyopovura

TTjV AVTOXVKOV kXoTTT^V.

A relief-vase by the potter Dionysios, found at Anthedon and now at Berlin, illustrates
this tale (C. Robert in the Winckelmannsfest-Progr. Berlin 1, 90 ff. with figs.). Cp. also
a red-figured Attic amphora from Ruvo now at Munich (Jahn Vasensamml. Miinchen
p. 254 ff. no. 805, T. Panofka in the Ann. d. Inst. 1848 xx. 162 ff. pi. G, Reinach Rep.
Vases i. 277, H. B. Walters History of Ancient Pottery London 1905 ii. 137, 264), which
according to the most probable interpretation (L. D. Barnett in Hermes 1898 xxxiii.
640ff.) represents the subsequent marriage of Antikleia with Laertes.

1 O. Jessen in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. viii. 83 f.

2 See W. H. Roscher Hermes dcr Windgott Leipzig 1878 p. 42 n. 164 and especially
Gruppe Gr. Myth. Rel. p. 1914 Index s.v. ' Rinderraub.'

3 K. Wernicke in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. i. 1581, Gruppe Gr. Myth. Rel. p. 134.
The original version of the myth was reconstructed by C. Robert in Hermes 1884 xix.
473 ff. from schol. Pind. Nem. 4. 43, schol. Pind. Islhm. 6 (5). 47, Apollod. 1. 6. 1.

4 Relief on building-stone at Malatia, near the confluence of the Tochma Su with the
Euphrates (J. Garstang in the Ann. Arch. Anthr. 1908 i. 3 f. pi. 4 f., id. The Land of the
Hittites London 1910 pp. 138 f., 399 pi. 44, id. The Syrian Goddess London 1913 p. 5 f.
fig. 1, with the original aspect of the bull's horns and the libation-vase restored by means
of dotted lines, D. G. Hogarth in the Ann. Arch. Anthr. 1909 ii. 180 f. pi. 41, 4).
Prof. Garstang The Land of the Hittites p. 138 writes: 'a deity, wearing a conical
head-dress decorated with rings, stands upon the back of a horned bull. His left leg
is forward..., and on his feet are tip-tilted shoes. In his right hand, which is drawn
 
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