Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Cook, Arthur B.
Zeus: a study in ancient religion (Band 3,1): Zeus god of the dark sky (earthquake, clouds, wind, dew, rain, meteorits): Text and notes — Cambridge, 1940

DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14698#0045

DWork-Logo
Überblick
loading ...
Faksimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Vollansicht
OCR-Volltext
io Zeus and the Earthquakes

.maketh the land to reel,' seisiclithon1, 'who maketh the land to
quake,' Sophokles speaks of him as tindktor gaias%, the 'agitator
of the earth.' And the poets in general conceive of him as stirring
both land and sea with his trident3.

But behind the poets lay old-world tradition. The Homeric
epithet gaieochos* was an actual cult-title of the god in Lakonike at

1 Pind. Isthm. I. 76 Kpbvov aeialxBov vlbv (sc. Poseidon), Bakchyl. 16. 57 ff. el | Se
Kal <re (sc. Theseus) Tpoifavla aeio-lxBovi ] <p{iTtvaev AtBpa lToffei|52i'[, k.t.X., 17. 21 f.
KpovlSa Avralov \ aeialxBovos t{kos {sc. Sinis son of Poseidon Avratos (cp. Steph. Byz. s.v.
Aurai, xuplov 8e<r<ra\fas, Sid to Xvffai to Tip.wq Hoo-eiS&va Kal o-KeSdaai to dirb tov ko.to.-
KXvapov SSoip, Hesych. s.v. Avto.Lt) • GerTaXij)), Dion. Hal. ant. Rom. 2. 3: KaXevrai Se 6
Beds, a raOra eTriTeXovai, Kowos virb 'Yupaluv ■ Sv e^epp.rjvev'ovTes eis ttjv y)p.eTipav yX&TTav,
HoceiSCjva aeialxBovd <pao~iv elvai Tives, Kal did tovto vrroyelcp TeTipr)aBai (Supy Xiyovciv,
otl tt)v yr\v 6 Bebs ovtos t?xet* k.t.X., Cornut. theol. 22 p. 42, 1 f. Lang eZra kvoslxBova Kal
ivoalyaiov Kal o~eio~ixBova Kal TivaKTopa yalas k.t.X., Gell. 2. 28. 1 antiquissimi Graecorum,
qui Neptunum aeialxBova appellaverunt, Amm. Marc. 17. 7. 12 Neptunum humentis sub-
stantiae potestatem Ennosigaeon et Sisichthona poetae veteres et theologi nuncupaverunt,
Orph. Arg. 345 f. avTbv tc KpovlSrjv aeialxBova, KvavoxaiTrjv, | KvpaTos iKirpodopbvTa
poXeiv erriTappoBov opKwv, Cougny Anth. Pal. Append. 4. 47. 1 f. = Orph. frag. 2, 1 f.
Abel, 285, 1 f. Kern <ppd£eo Srj Kal Tdvoe Xbyov, t^kos, birKOTe Kev Srj \ yatav Kivrjcrrj
"SeialxBwv KvavoxalTris (Cougny and Abel print aaalxBwv KvavoxalTTjs), | k.t.X., oracl. Sib.
3. 402 ff. (cp. 1. 184 ff.) Geffcken brrrrbTe Key 'Pehjs piKpbv yivos iv xBovl KVfia (so
Wilamowitz for pev/xa, cp. 1. 184) | divaov pi^rjiriv dSi^"r)Toicri TedrfXbs \ avTbvpepvov aio~Tov
irj iv vvktI yivrjTai \ iv rrbXei airavSptp ffeiaixBovos (so Castalio (S. Chateillon) for drlveis
xBovbs cod. $ and aTr)aeis xBovbs cod. SE') evvomyalov, | rjv rrore q>i]p,l%ovcriv irruivvplrjv
AopvXaiov I dpxalrjs ^pvylrjs iroXvSaKpvroio KeXaivrjs (allusion to Kelainai). [But in oracl.
Sib. 2. 16ff. Geffcken b-n-brav aeicrixBuv daTepon-qTrjs j eiSdXuiv frijXov BpavcreiXabv re Tivd^ei]
"Piipr]s ewTaX6<poio the reference is to the supreme Deity of the Jews or the Christians.]
Cp. et. mag. p. 668, 54 aelaoi, aeicrlxBwv.

Scholl—Studemund anecd. i. 267 'HiriBeTa HoaeiSGivos (10) KivrjalxBovos perhaps
originated in a gloss, cp. Hesych. s.v. ivvocrlyaios- Kiv-qo-lyaios. irrLBeTov Hoo-eiSSivos.

2 Soph. Track. 500 ff. Kal owus KpovlSav diraTaaev {sc. how Kypris beguiled Zeus) ov
Xiyoi, I ovSe tov 'evvvxov "AiSav, j t) lloaecSduva TivaKTopa yalas, Cornut. theol. 22 p. 42, 2
Lang (quoted in the preceding note) = Eudok. viol. 769 (p. 569, 24 f. Flach) elra evvo-
a'q(6ova Kal ewoelyawv Kal o-eiaixBova Kal TivaKTopa yalas k.t.X. Cp. Nonn. Dion. 21. 155 f.
Kal xBovbs eirp-qvve (sc. Hera) TivaKTopa Kvavoxahriv | yvuirbv ebv Kal Zrjva rrbcriv Kal /irjTepa
'PeLrjv, k.t.X.

3 Aisch. P.v. 924 f. BaXaffo~lav re yrjs TivaKTeipav v6o~ov, j Tplaivav, alx^v T-qv lloffei-
SLovos, o-KeSq (sc. Zeus) (Wilamowitz, accepting the vbcrwv of cod. Med.1, rewrites OaXao-aiav
re yrjs TivaKTeipav vbawv \ alxfiyv, Tplaivav rj XloaeiSuivos aKeSol), Aristoph. eq. 839^ tSv
£v[ipidxuv t api~eis ^xwv Tplaivav, | 7} iroXXd x?y)^ar' tpya&ei celwv re Kal TapaTTUv (of
Demos as Poseidon), nub. 566 f. tov re pieyaaBevr) Tpialvrjs Tap.lav, j 797s re Kal dXfivpds
daXdaar)s dypiov fioxXevr-qv with schol. ad loc. Sokci yap 6 HotreiSGi' oti ttjv BdXaff&av Kivelv
fibvov dXXd Kal tt)v yr)v, Nikephoros progymn. 7. 12 (C. Walz Rhetores Graeci Stuttgartiae
—-Tubingae 1832 i. 498, 15 f.) Ho&eiS&v tt)v yrjv dfe/aixXeue, cp. Verg. Aen. 2. 418 f.,
610 ff.

4 Homer uses this epithet sometimes with (//. 13. 43, 20. 34, Od. 1. 68, 3. 55, 8. 322,
8. 350, 9- 528, h. Pos. 6), sometimes without the name of the god (II. 9. 183, 13. 59,
13. 83, 13.125- I3-677. '4- 355, 15- i74> 15- 2or, 15. 222, 23. 584, Od. n. 241, //. Herm.
187), but always of Poseidon. Later poets, misconceiving the second element in the
compound, applied it to other deities (Aisch. suppl. 813 ff. ire/3/[foii S' iKe'ras aiSev,
yai[doxe rrayKpaTes Zed, Soph. O.T. J 59 ff. wpoiTa ere KeK.Xbp.evos, Biyarep Aibs, &p.{ipoT
 
Annotationen