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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#0342

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Zeus Thaulios

by terra-cotta figures and vase-fragments. Next, a necropolis of
the 'geometric' period. Over a score of graves, rectangular in shape,
built of and covered with large stone slabs1, were but poorly
furnished; they contained a few vases, small bronzes, and iron
weapons. The cist-graves had, however, been left undisturbed by
later builders. Immediately above them was placed the Hellenic
temple, or rather a sequence of three Hellenic temples. The first,
which appears to have been constructed, in part at least, of timber2,
dated from s. vii B.C., to judge from the fragment of an early Doric
capital. To it belonged a mass of votive offerings in bronze, silver,
gold, ivory, and other materials3. These had been deposited in two
bothroi or favissae, one about 11-50™ to the south, the other to the
west of the temple: the contents of the latter were thrown in with
the earth as filling for a retaining-wall of the next temple. The
offerings included many bronze animals (horses, cocks, geese, etc.),
a bronze handle in the form of a griffin's head, the bronze statuette
of a warrior4; gold and silver ornaments of 'orientalising' date;
an Egyptian head of good style, scarabs with bogus hieroglyphs;
terra-cotta figurines of korai seated or standing, some being frag-
ments of almost life-sized figures, sundry types of ko&roi, statuettes
of sick or deformed persons, several ex-voto effigies of hands and
feet; carved ivory seals and couchant beasts recalling those from
Sparta5. The second temple, built c. 550—500 B.C. and burnt
c. 400 B.C., is represented by many architectural remains found
underneath the south-east corner of its successor. Here were four
Doric columns in poros with fragments of archaic Doric capitals
and frieze-blocks in the same material, showing traces of painted
stucco—all used as foundations of the latest edifice6. Within the
temple was the base of a bronze statue, inscribed in lettering of
450—400 B.C. '[? Strongyl]ion made me7.' Parts of a female statue
in marble were also found, half life-sized and of good fifth-century
work8. The third temple was erected in the first quarter of s. iv B.C.

1 Details in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1925 xlix. 459 f.
" Jahrb. d. kais. deutsch. arch. Inst. 1926 xli Arch. Anz. p. 429, D. S. Robertson
A Handbook of Greek & Roman Architecture Cambridge 1929 p. 65 n. 3.

3 Bull. Corr. Hell. 1923 xlvii. 524.

4 Bull. Corr. Hell. 1926 1. 562 with fig. 9.

5 a. M. Woodward in the fourn. Hell. Stud. 1924 xliv. 275.
0 Bull. Corr. Hell. 1925 xlix. 460 with fig. 3.

7 A. M. Woodward in the fourn. Hell. Stud. 1926 xlvi. 247 n. 26 [---]ioy ^

£7rotecr[ec]: 'The discoverer would restore the name Strongylion.'

8 Id. ib. p. 247-
 
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