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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#0163

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Aiolos Hippotades

as hippiochdrmes, 'fighting with chariot and horses,' in obvious
imitation of the patronymic Hippotades applied in the Odyssey to
the former1. And both epithets might conceivably have reference
to the frequent conception of the winds as horses2. I should, how-
ever, prefer to stress another point of contact between Aiolos
Hippotades and Aiolos son of Hellen, 1 mean the abnormal
endogamic character of the marriage-custom that obtained among
their descendants.

According to Homer, the six sons of Aiolos Hippotades married
their six sisters3. Greeks of the Hellenistic age, perhaps jibbing at
the idea, felt it necessary to invent some explanation. Thus
Parthenios, Virgil's tutor4, making a precis of Philetas' Hermes for
the benefit of Virgil's friend Cornelius Gallus5, told how Odysseus
in the course of his wanderings round Sicily had reached the island
of Meligounis (later called Lipara6) and there fallen in love with
Polymele, one of Aiolos' daughters; how, after his departure with
the bag of winds, she had been found in love-sick plight weeping
over certain spoils of Troy; how Aiolos had reviled the absent
Odysseus and resolved to take vengeance on Polymele; and finally
how her brother Diores, who was enamoured of her, had begged her
off and persuaded his father to give her to him as his wife7.

Now the same peculiar usage occurs again in connexion with
the other Aiolos, eponym of the Aeolians. For he was king of
Thessaly8; and the marriage of brother with sister is expressly
stated to have been an ancient custom among- the Thessalians9.
Moreover, Makedon the ancestor of the Macedonians was, in the
opinion of Hellanikos10, a son of Aiolos. Hence the fact that the

1 Supra p. 106.

2 W. H. Roscher Hermes der Windgott Leipzig 1878 p. 107, E. H. Meyer Indoger-
manische Mythen Berlin 1887 ii (Achilleis). 451 ff., H. W. Stoll in Roscher Lex. Myth.
i. 2691, Gruppe Gr. Myth. Rel. pp. 838 f., 1148, H. Steinmetz 'Windgotter' in the
fahrb. d. hats, deutsch. arch. Inst. 1910 xxv. 33 n. 5.

3 Siipra p. 106. 4 Macrob. Sat. 5. 17. 18 with L. Jan adloc.
6 Parthen. narr. am. praef. 1 f.

6 Kallim. h. Arte>?t. 47 f., Strab. 275, Steph. Byz. s.vv. Kiirapa, MeXryouWs.

7 Parthen. narr. am. 2, irepi IIoXu^mjXijs (iaropei 4>iXtjt£s "iHp/J.rj (on which poem see
A. Meineke Analecta Alexandrina Berolini 1843 p. 348 ff., K. Kuiper ' De Philetae Coi
Mercurio' in H. van Herwerden's Album Gratulatorium Trajecti ad Rhenum 1902
pp. 143—149, J- U. Powell Collectanea Alcxandrina Oxonii 1825 p. 91 f.)).

8 Apollod. 1. 7. 3, cp. Konon narr. 27.

8 Archinos Qeaaa\iKa. frags. 1, 2 (Frag. hist. Gr. iv. 319 Midler) ap. schol. T. Od.
10. 7 apxatov ?9os, us 'Apx^vos (so W. Dindorf for' Apxlvov cod.) iv QtaaaXtKo'is. irp&Ta
de AtoXov Ojuo/wpv^as Kdpas d5e\<pois crvvoiKlo-ai (so W. Dindorf for crwoi/ojcrcu cod.). Cp.
schol. B. Q. Od. 10. 7 apxatov (60s to o-vvoiKifciv a5e\<po6s. Kai 6 Zei)s &Se\<l>Tj oilcrfl ovvoiKei
T27"Hpp. k. t. X. For Archinos see E. Schwartz in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. ii. 541.

10 Hellanik. frag. 46 (Frag. hist. Gr. i. 51 Mtiller) 74 (Frag. gr. Hist. i. 126
 
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