Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

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#0664
Overview
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
590 The double axe and Zeus Labrdyndos

ing of apronaos and cella, with a square recess at the end. The length of the cella

inside the walls is 38' 3" by a width of
33'6". The doorway is 12'2" in width.
Two lintel stones still stretch across
the top. The height of the doorway is
about 18'. The flanking walls consist
of twelve courses, each about iV deep.
The thickness of this wall is 6' V'. Be-
yond the doorway the side walls of the
pronaos extend 16' 8". At a height of
12' from the ground outside, and 2' 3"
from the floor inside, the walls are
pierced at regular intervals by win-
dows 6' 3" by 3' 6" at the base, tapering
slightly upwards. Round these win-
dows is a slight sinking, as if to receive
shutters. The view from them is most
striking, embracing the plain of My-
lasa, Paitschin, Leros, Calymnos, Cos,
Budrum, and the mountains all round.
Near this building drums of fluted
marble columns were lying about1.
The diameter of one was about 3'. A
smaller one measured 2' 1"."'

Labranda in its palmy days
had other attractions besides this

*---- -----* many-windowed fane with its

Fig. 494. large and well-built precinct.

Here grew a fine grove of sacred
plane-trees, to which the Carian troops fled for refuge after their
disastrous defeat by the Persians under Daurises on the banks of
the Marsyas (the modern China Chat) during the Ionian revolt2.
Here too was a spring of clear water, in which were kept tame eels
decked with earrings and chains of gold3.

The Carians, being a warlike race, viewed their axe-bearing god

1 Id. ib. p. 614 n.° says: ' Prokesch von Osten [A. Prokesch-Osten Denkzvurdigkeiten
und Erinnerungen aus dem Orient ed. E. Munch Stuttgart 1837 iii. 449] describes other
ruins on this site. He saw a portico with twelve columns standing, now probably thrown
down ; a great number of pieces of frieze lying on the ground; a massive wall of hewn
stone fitted without mortar, 134 paces long, connected with a row of chambers not less
than 200 paces long ; and at the end of the wall a tower. The whole area covered by the
ruins he estimates as not more than 400 paces in width : he considers these remains to be
of the Roman period.'

2 Hdt. 5. 119.

3 Plin. nat. hist. 32. 16 e manu vescuntur pisces...item in Labrayndi {stipra p. 585
n. 3) Iovis fonte anguillae et inaures additas gerunt, Ail. de nat. an. 12. 30 xelP°V^€LS 5e
t'X^Os /cat lnra.K0V0i>Tes rrj k\7]<T€l /cat rporpas avpievws dexb/xevoi TroWaxbdL /cat eiai /cat
Tpe<povraL, tiairep ovv,..nai ev Tip iepi+ Se rou Aaftpavdews Aids ev Kprjvy dieidovs vdp.aros,
/cat 'ixov<JI-v op/j.L(7Kovs xPvcro^s Ka^ eXX6/3ia, xpwra pLevroi /cat raura.
 
Annotationen