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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

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14698#0123

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76 The Clouds personified in Cult and Myth

Demeter on a thrice-ploughed field in Crete, became by her the
father of the infant Ploutos, and was thunder-struck by Zeus (fig. 22)1
for his presumption2. This ancient myth, though it had the sanction

Eifersucht getodtet. Der Dichter des e almt nicht, dass Jasion mit Zeus wesensgleich
ist').

1 G. Kieseritzky 'Iasios' in the Sirena ILelbigiana Lipsiae 1900.pp. 160—163 with fig.
( = my fig. 22) published a fragmentary red-figured krcittr of late style, from Chersonesos
Taurike, now in the Hermitage at Petrograd, which appears to represent the scene.
A young man (l A??0?) in oriental garb flings up both arms with a gesture of despair
and looks back in terror towards the left, where just beyond a neighbouring hill Nike is
seen driving the chariot of Zeus (?). On the right sits a bearded god holding a long
staff (trident? sceptre??). Beside him was a goddess, whose arm with its arm-band is
visible leaning on his left shoulder. They are probably Poseidon and Amphitrite. Beneath
the necks of the horses appears the corner of some squared structure. Above it the
letters ...?0? suggest comparison with the XPY?0? and PAOTO?, who flank the
chariot of NIKH on a gilded oinochde from Athens, now at Berlin (Furtwangler Vasensamml.
Berlin ii. 761 f. no. 2661, Lenormant—de Witte El. mon. cir. i. 307 ff. pi. 97, O. Jahn
Ueber bemalte Vasen mit Goldschvmck Leipzig 1865 p. 13 no. 13, T. Eisele in Roscher
Lex. Myth. iii. 2582, J. Toutain in Daremberg—Saglio Diet. Ant. iv. 518).

On the variants 'laaiav, 'Ia.<rwi>, 'Idffios, "laaos, see W. Gundel in Pauly—Wissowa
Real-Enc. ix. 752 f. "laaaos is not elsewhere attested; but cp. 'laaabs for 'loads, the
Carian town (L. Biirchner ib. ix. 785 f.). The suffix -<ros or -<r<rot seems to be character-
istic of prehistoric Greece (P. Rretschmer Einleitung in die Geschiekte der grieehischen
Sprache Gottingen 1896 p. 401, G. Glotz La civilisation tgienne Paris 1923 p. 440,
A. Debrunner in Ebert Reallex. iv. 2. 520 f., J. B. Haley in the Am. Joum. Arch. 1928
xxxii. 144 (full list and map), M. P. Nilsson Homer and Mycenae London 1933 p. 64 ff.
(list and map)).

2 By far the fullest and best account of the myth is that given by W. Gundel in
Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. ix. 752—758.
 
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