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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

DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14698#0258

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Hephaistos and Athena

197

to further finds—the head of a terra-cotta figure and another tube-shaped vessel with
vertical loops or handles, a ridge resembling a snake, and oval holes or apertures in the
sides. But the objects associated with the new finds belong to the archaic Greek period
and point to a local survival of the ' Minoan' cult (L. Pernier in the Bollettino d'arte 1908
455 ff-ng- 11 cited by R. Zahn in K. F. Kinch Fouilles de Vronlia {Rhodes) Berlin
r9i4 p. 28 and by Nilsson Min.-Myc. Rel. p. 386). The shrine of the snake-goddess at
Gournia in eastern Crete {supra ii. 538), believed to be of the 'Late Minoan i' period,
c- 1580—1475 B.C., had five tubular vessels still in situ. One, of-which the base only
remained, stood on the low plastered tripod. Round it were ranged four others. Three
°f these, practically complete, supplement the snaky loops by an extra handle surmounted
by ritual horns ; one adds a disk above the horns, another a pair of snakes crossing under
the handle, the third a symbol now missing—possibly a bird (Mrs B. E. Williams in
H. Boyd Hawes, B. E. Williams, R. B. Seager, and E. H. Hall Gournia, Vasiliki and
°ther prehistoric sites on the Isthmus of Hierapetra, Crete Philadelphia 1908 p. 47 f. pi. 11,

mv %s- IIS—IJ7i L. Pernier in G. Maraghiannis Antiquite's Critoises Vienne
ia? • ' ^' V" 2' and ^" Dussaud Les civilisations prthelltniques dans le

zuTp ^ la Mer ^* Paris '910 P- 200 with fiS- »4»i G. Karo in D. H. Haas Bihleratlas
pp lswnsSesMchte Leipzig—Erlangen 1925 vii p. viii fig. 51, Nilsson Min.-Myc. Rel.
Ka 3 B> 267, 271). Lastly, a tubular vessel, found in Rhodes, probably at

sha Ir°S' anc* now 'n tne Antiquarian) at Berlin (inv. no. 4563), is of roughly similar
tja ,e" ^' 's o.28jm high, and again has no bottom. A ribbed handle on either side is
serr 6 "J four bosses and two snakes in relief. Three of these snakes have tongues
Vessel6 llke a" oal<"leaf' the fourth has a tongue small and pointed. The neck of the
M'hich IS ^ecorate^ w'l'r a number of birds, separately modelled and attached, several of
zig.j, te miss'ng. The light brown clay is painted rather carelessly with maeanders,
havea^S'ietlr' °^ dafk brown glaze in the geometric style—an indication that here too we
■khod* ' • n0an' usap surviving into post-' Minoan' times (R. Zahn ' Kultgerat aus
a, I, , ln K. F. Kinch Fouilles de Vroulia (Rhodes) Berlin 1914 pp. 26—34 fig. 13
nd c ( = my fig. 118 a, b, and c), E. Kuster Die Schlangein der griechischen Kunst und
 
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