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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#0330

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266

Zeus Ikmaios

of the great culture-heroes of Greece, who learnt the care of sheep
and oxen from the Nymphs and of bees from the Brisai. But
drought befell the island, for the Etesian Winds failed and plants
and animals suffered1. At this point the narrative as told by
Herakleides of Pontos, the pupil of Aristotle2, breaks off abruptly.
It is continued by Apollonios of Rhodes3. Aristaios by his wisdom
averted disaster. Gathering together the Parrhasian folk of Lykaon's
lineage (presumably Arcadian settlers in Keos4), he made a great
altar for Zeus Ikmaios, Lord 'of the Damp5,' and sacrificed on the
mountains both to the star Seirios and to Zeus son of Kronos.
Thereupon Zeus sent the Etesian Winds to blow for forty days and
cool the earth. Hence the Cean custom that priests offer burnt-

1 Herald. Pont. loc. cit.

2 Aristot.511 Rose2.

3 Ap. Rhod. 2. 519 ff. \lwev 5' 076 iraTpbs etperfirj | i'dlrjv, ev Si K4it> Karev6.affa.t0, Ac"""
dyetpas | llappdcnov, rolirep re AvKaovbs eiVt yevid\l)i, \ KdX {Swflbv wolrjoe fiiyav Aw*
'I/c^a/oio, I Upd r ei 'ippe^ev iv oipeaiv dcrripi Kelvtp \ Xetplip aiirifS re KpoviSr/ Ad. toio
e/crjTi I yoXav iTri^iixovinv ir-qaiai e/c Aios adpat {supra p. 142 n. 6) ijfiara reooapaKOvra
Kiio 5' £ti vvv leprjes | dvToXiav irpoirapoLde Kucds pi^ovai dvr/Xds. So Theophr. de vent. 14
ei Si tot H-4\iirov Kal 'Aptaralos aureus dveKa.~Kio-o.TO 6v<ras rds iv Ktip dvfflas to} A"
KaBdnep ixvdoXoyovai, k.t.X. and more fully Clem. Al. Strom. 6. 3 p. 444, 30 ff.

Stahlin

irdXiv io-Topodcrtv "E\\ijj<es iKXeiivbvTuv irori rav eTT)0~lwv dvifiav 'ApuTacov iv Kiqi 6vo~M
'iK/xaiio (so L. C. Valckenaer for io-0/j.toii cod. L.) Ad • iroXKi] yap rp tpdopa, <p\oy0
Stain/j.Trpap.evojv ttovtuv Kal Si} Kai tojv dvaipuxeLV T0(^ KapiroilS eiwdbTUV dvi/j-oiv ^
irvebvToiV<b Si {ins. U. von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff)>pa8(us aiTois dveKa\io-aTO. CP"
Hyg. poet, ash: 2. 4 praeterea Canicula exoriens aestu Ceorum (so B. Bunte for eorU
codd. D.G.N.) loca et agros fructibus orbabat et ipsos morbo adfectos'poenas Icaro c°
dolore sufferre cogebat, quod latrones recepissent. quorum rex Aristaeus Apollir"s
Cyrenes filius, Actaeonis pater, petiit a parente, quo facto calamitate civitatem poS
liberare. quern deus iubet multis hostiis expiare Icari mortem, et ab love petere, ut,
tempore Canicula exoriretur, dies XL ventum daret, qui aestum Caniculae mederetur. 1u0
iussum Aristaeus confecit et ab love impetravit ut etesiae flarent. quas nonnulli ete ^ ^
dixerunt, quod quotannis certo tempore exoriuntur {Itos enim Graece annus est Lat'11^'
nonnulli etiam aetesias (so A. van Staveren for etesias codd., d-wb tou ahelv) appellavef
quod expostulatae sunt ab love et ita concessae.

A. Pridik De Cei insnlae rebus Dorpati Livonorum 1892 pp. 19—21

wou

Id dis-
staeiun

credit this notion of an Arcadian settlement in Keos (' Quod veteres scriptores Ar>st' ^
aut cum Parrhasiis ex Arcadia venisse aut postea in Arcadiam se contulisse naLj|jer
collegerunt nimirum ex Aristaei Jovisque cultu et Ceis et Arcadibus communi')- F- g
von Gaertringen in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. ii. 853 is less sceptical (' Indessen hat ^
Wanderung von Arkadem nach Keos an sich nichts Unwahrscheinliches; auch a
ionischen Wanderung nahmen nach Herodt. I 146 ' ApKaoes UeXao-yol teil *)- , gV,

5 Schol. Ap. Rhod. 2. 522 'iKfialov Si Aids lepbv itrrlv iv Ki(fi, Tovriari. ^'"^^s
'iveKev rijs UfidSos Kai Tijs lrvorjs twv dviuuv. So cod. Par. The vulgate ^^p0v>
'iKfialoio. eveKa T77S iK/idSos. iv Trj KcJ (sic) Si iariv lepbv Aids iK/ialov, Tourer'
en-el afrios yiyove rrjs irvorjs tOsv dvi/xtov. K. Manthos thought he could locate the ^
of Zeus Ikmaios at a place called fiiKpd 'EWqixxd, near "EWr/viKd between l°u for
Karthaia. There were remains of Cyclopean walls, which had been used as a qu
building two neighbouring churches, one being that of the Taxiarchai \Inscf-

1 no. 543).
 
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