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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#0424

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Water-carrying and the Dana'ides 355

(a) Water-carrying in the myth of the Dana'ides.

The story of the Dana'ides is told as follows by Apollodoros1.
Danaos and Aigyptos were twin-brothers. Belos, their father, settled
Danaos in Libye, Aigyptos in Arabia. Aigyptos, however, conquered
the Melampodes and named their land Egypt after himself. The
two brothers had, by various wives, a numerous progeny—Danaos
fifty daughters, Aigyptos fifty sons. They became rival claimants
to the throne; and Danaos, fearing the sons of Aigyptos, at
Athena's instigation put his daughters on board a ship2, which he
^evised for the purpose, and fled. He touched at Rhodes, where he
Set up the image of Athena Lindia*. Thence he came to Argos,
and Gelanor the Argive king abdicated in his favour4. < Having
ius become master of the country, he named the inhabitants Danaoi
aftei" himself5. > The country was then suffering from a drought;
*"°r Poseidon had dried up its springs, being wroth with Inachos for

g Apollod. 2. 1. 4, cp. schol. II. 1. 42, Hyg. fab. 168—170. For variants see
• ^ernicke in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. i. 1005 f., O. Waser ib. iv. 2087 ff., 20948".
So also schol. Ap. Rhod. 1. 4 fi\\oi Si Xeyovcn (fiivroi <f>aal cod. Paris.) Aavabv
fab^IX*V°V ^"'^ MytivTov -wpSirov KaracrKevdirai (sc. vavv)' S8ev Kai AavaU ekXtjSij. Hyg.
foil tUn° Pr'mum dicitur Minerva navera fecisse biproram in qua Danaus profugeret
KX 0^ SC^°^' A- r' 42 UTrofle^y??? 'A.dT]vas a\iT<g vavv tt/jwtos KartaKevave tt)v

tt-aav ws faft T0g ^pLg^0g T^v Ovyaripuif avrod TrevrriKovropov.
^}rc^ . wnorn see a valuable paper by C. Blinkenberg ' La deesse de Lindos' in the

^^f- Rel. 1930 xxviii. 154—165 with figs. 1—11.
;n p tne succession of Danaos to Gelanor see Paus. 2. 16. 1 and the interesting omen
■^Poll S' ^ I^ (w0^ kills bull = Danaos deposes Gelanor, and founds sanctuary of
sPeak°n J^'aos)- P'out- v. Pyrrh. 32 locates the omen near Pyramia in Thyreatis, and
^pQyS 0 Gelanor as driven out by a arda-is. Interp. Serv. in Verg. Aen. 4. 377 makes
pu Slve an oracle to Danaos ' ut profectus ubi invenisset taurum et lupum inter se
vetQ , es' sPectaret exitum pugnae, et si taurus vicisset, Neptuno templa construeret; si
T-ycio Apollini delubrum sacraret. sed cum Danaus lupum videret vicisse, Apollini
dedit.' This famous encounter is commemorated on a late autonomous
'[Tlnv°m °f Argos' which has obv. the forepart of a wolf to the right, rev. H PA KAE
(P. G tlle i°rePart °f a bull to the right. This is usually described as 'running'
^wj/p1?6^ °r 'charging' (S. W. Grose), but may rather be moribund (Brit. Mus. Cat.
it, jj ^loP°nnesus p. ,47 pl. 28, 9 ( = my fig. 235), McClean Cat. Coins ii. 460 pi. 232,
d Hist- num.* p. 440).

e

of

Fig- 235-

° Th

1555 frw Words were added to the text of Apollodoros by B. Aegius in the editioprinceps
"WoO T t concluding sentence of schol. A. D.I/. 1. 42 avrbs Si Kparfaas rijs xw/)as
T°W ifoiKoGfTm Aavaovs wvbp.aoev. iaropeV AiroWddupos iv /S'.

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