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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#0846

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756 Zeus in Astronomy and Astrology

Aristotle in his work On the Universe draws up a list, which
gives both the earlier and the later names arranged in the Greek
order1:

Planet. Earlier name. Later name.

Saturn. Phainon (the ' Shining'). Kronos.

Iupiter. Phaethon (the ' Brilliant'). Zeus.

Mars. Pyroeis (the 'Fiery'). Herakles or Ares.

Mercury. StUbon (the 'Gleaming'). Hermes or Apollon.

Venus. Phosphoros (the ' Light-bringer'). Aphrodite or Hera.

The Babylonians assigned Iupiter to their chief deity Marduk, not
because Iupiter appeared to them as the largest of the planets2
(that would rather have been Saturn), but because his bright golden
disk shone so steadily and was visible for so long in the sky3. The
fifth tablet of the creation-epic represents Marduk, under the name
of Nibiru, as exercising a control over all the stars and especially
as ordering the constellations :

'He established the stations for the great gods.
The stars, their likeness, he set up as constellations4.'

Further, Marduk as the paramount god of the Babylonian pantheon
had taken over from Enlil of Nippur the title Bel or ' Lord
Hence the Greeks, equating him with their own supreme deity,
spoke of him as Zeus Be/os6. And the Romans attributed the

1 Aristot. de nmndo 2. 392 a 23 fif.

2 M. Jastrow The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria Boston etc. 1898 p. 459.

3 M. Jastrow Die Religion Babyloniens und Assyriens Giessen 1912 ii. 1. 444 after
Kugler op. cit. i. 8 and 14.

4 M. Jastrow The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria Boston etc. 1898 pp. 434. 459.

5 Id. ib. p. 117 f., id. Aspects of Religious Belief and Practice in Babylonia and
Assyria New York and London 191 r pp. 19, 38, 100, id. Die Religion Babyloniens tind
Assyriens Giessen 1912 ii. 2. 1081 Index s.v. 'Marduk,' A. Jeremias in Roscher Lex.
Myth. ii. 2341 f., 2372.

6 Corp. inscr. Gr. iii no. 4482, 10 (Palmyra) tov vabv tov [tou] Atds [BrjXov £~\v Tip

t[.......], no. 4485, 14 ff. (Palmyra) /cat vvvei XaLnrpuis avjunroaiaplxov t&v tov Atds BrjXov

ie\lp]u>v [yevofxepov ?], Dion Cass. 78. 8 wairep Kai 6 Zeus 6 BtjXos ovo/xa^b/xevos Kai iv rrj
('AwafAeia rrjs Supt'as TiLiufxevos, Hdt. 1. 181 (at Babylon) Aids B77X0U ipbv xa^KOTrvXov
k.t.X., Eustath. in Dionys. per. 1005 BtjXos 8e r)v &acri\evs BafivXQvos, vibs Aids, d<p' ov /cat
7ruXat BafivXQvos B^XtSes, 7) /cat b Zeus aurbs Kara rivas. 5td Kai Hpodoros iepbv ehai
avTodi Xeyei BrjXov Atos, Ktesias ap. Diod. 2. 8 (a bronze statue) Atos, 6V KaXovaiv oi
BapvXdovioi BrjXov, 2. 9 iepbv Atos, 8v KaXovaiv oi BafivXwvioi Kadairep elprjKap-ev, BrjXov,
Berossos Babyloniaca sive Chaldaica frag. 2 {Frag. hist. Gr. ii. 498 Miiller) ap. Agath.
hist. 1. 24 (supra p. 10 n. \)'Br)Xov p.ev tov Ata, Philon Bybl. frag. 2 {Frag. hist. Gr. iii.
568 Miiller) ap. Euseb. praep. ev. 1. 10. 26 Zeus BrjXos, Hesych. s.v. B^Xos' ovpavbs. Kai
Zeus Kai ILocretdCovos utos, Bekker anecd. i. 225, 29 f. B??Xos ' 6 ovpavbs, fiapvTbvws, Kai Zeus,
/cat IToo-eiSwi'os utos, Nonn. Dion. 3. 291 Z^a Aifivv re/ce B^Xo^, 40. 392 f. BrjXos iir
~Ev<pprjTao, At'/3us /ce/cX^/zeVos "A/xliwv, | * Arris e'0us NetXyos, "Apa\p Kpovos, 'Aacrvpios Zeus.
See further K. Tumpel in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. iii. 259 ff.
 
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