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Cook, Arthur B.
Zeus: a study in ancient religion (Band 2,1): Zeus god of the dark sky (thunder and lightning): Text and notes — Cambridge, 1925

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14696#0262

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The Delphic Tripod 203

Fig. 143-

The figure of Apollon, isolated from this group, reappears on a handsome Apulian
amphora with volute handles, found at Ceglie and now at Berlin (Furtwangler Vasen-
samml. Berliti ii. 905 ff. no. 3256), the neck of which shows Orestes at Pytho pursued by
an Erinys : between them is Apollon on his tripod with his right hand outstretched and
his left holding a long bay-branch ; two females (?Pythia and attendant) fly in alarm
(Raoul-Rochette Monumens inidits d antiqtiite figurie Paris 1831 p. 193 ff. pi. 35, Over-
beck Gall. her. Bildw. i. 710 f. Atlas pi. 29, 4, id. Gr. Kunstmyth. Apollon p. 232 Atlas
pi. 22, 8, O. Hofer in Roscher Lex. Myth. iii. 982). Similarly a Lucanian amphora from
Anzi in the same collection (Furtwangler Vasensamml. Berlin ii. 868 no. 3148) figures
the god with a phidle raised in his right hand, but has the attribute in his left over-
painted as a club, Apollon being thereby converted into a Herakles (E. Gerhard Berlin' s
antike Bildwerke Berlin 1836 i. 275 f. no. 979, Lenormant—de YVitte El. mon. ce'r. ii. 143).
The same figure, reversed and bereft of its attributes, but still accompanied by Leto and
Artemis, served for Apollon Pythios in the dedication of Xenokrateia {supra p. 183
n. 1). It was even translated, without essential change, from sculpture in relief to sculp-
ture in the round, cp. "(i) a statue in the Villa Albani at Rome (S. Raffei Ricerche sopra
tin Apolline della villa Albani Rome i82r with views of front, side, and back, Clarac
Mus. de Sculpt, pi. 486 B fig. 737 A = Reinach Rip. Stat. i. 249 no. 6 side-view,
T. Panofka Die Heilgotter der Griechen Berlin 1845 p. 5 pi. 1, 6 front-view, Overbeck
Gr. Kunstmyth. Apollon p. 231 ff. Atlas pi. 23, 30 three-quarter position, Miiller—
Wieseler—Wernicke Ant. Denkm. ii. 3. 309 pi. 25, 14 front-view, W. Helbig Fiilirer
durch die bffentlichen Sammlnngen klassischer Altertiimer in Rom3 Leipzig 1913 ii. 409 f.
no. 1848); (ii) a statue at Naples (G. Finati in the Real Mnseo Borbonico Napoli 1843
xiii. 1—4 pi. 41, Clarac Mus. de Sculpt, pi. 485 fig. 937 front-view, ib. pi. 486 A fig. 937
three-quarter position = Reinach Rip. Stat. i. 248 no. 3 and i. 249 no. 2, Overbeck Gr.
Kunsitnyth. Apollon p. 23 iff.).

Overbeck op. cit. p. 282 rightly observes that in all these representations Apollon has
a bare body with a himdtion wrapped about his legs. Since this is the normal costume of
the seated Zeus, we may, I think, conclude that Apollon is here conceived as the mouth-
piece of Zeus himself.
 
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