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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#0434

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Water-carrying and the Dana'ides 365

normal form in Greek writers. Had Virgil tradition behind him,
when he made Danae found Ardea1, the capital of Turnus the son
°f Daunus2? Danae—Dannus may be more than a mere assonance.
But, if the Daunioi were really akin to the Danaoi, we might look
to find the former like the latter associated with the irrigation of a
Waterless region. In point of fact the Roman poets do emphasise
the arid character of Daunia. Horace3 speaks of it as the land

Where Daunus, scant of water, ruled .
The rustic tribes.

And Ovid4 mentions

the parched fields
Of Iapygian Daunus.

That the Daunioi, like the Danaoi, constructed t/wlos-tombs is a
Possible, though precarious, inference from a few lines in Lykophron5.
This writer of prophetic rigmarole sets out to tell how the Daunioi
shall bury alive certain Aetolian envoys, sent to recover the quondam
P°ssessions of Diomedes6:

Within a darksome grave that savage folk
Shall hide them, living yet, in the inmost nooks
Of a hollow passage. Aye, for them the Daunites
Shall build a tomb, with never a funeral rite,
Roofed over by a pile of rounded stones.

whether the Daunioi had tholoid wells, we cannot even conjec-
e- Surviving examples of the type on Italian soil are the

Ioq° ^'runum)> Cariaus (ii. v no. 3922 Arurnates near Verona), Cnodauus (ib. iii no.
ticca ^urse"a 'n Upper Pannonia), Licaus (Dessau Inscr. Lat. sel. no. 2577 Dalmatia)
j22" * (Corp. inscr. Lat. vi no. 26528 Rome, ix no. 42 Brundisium) Liccau...(ib. iii no.
ij2g. ^Ss°nium), Lomoliauus {ib. v no. 450 Piquentum), Opiauus (ib. iii nos. 10121,
3'2 alrnatia) Opiaua (ib. iii no. 2900 Corinium), Ildrpaos (Corp. inscr. Att. ii. 1 no.
Witn j **w^<»'Ta Ylarpaov llafovo [cp. the silver coins of Paionia, struck c. 340—315 b.c.,
Cat c^Cnd ^ATPAOY (Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Macedonia, etc. p. 2 f. figs., Hunter
p. 236*7" l' 348 p1' *♦> 8' McClean Cat- Coins M. 81 f. pi. 137, 12—20, Head Hist, num.2
Ho. ' g 149)])> Quasannaus (Corp. inscr. Lat. v no. 3463 Verona), Ridaus (ib. iii
Venetiaf S-aet'a^' ^emauus (ib- >2 no- 2195 near Aquileia) god of the river Timavus in
from \x 'za°s (ched by F. Ribezzo La lingua degli antichi Messapii Napoli 1907 p. 6
0r ^a^ofi1 ^alal)ria)> Virraus (Corp. inscr. Lat. v no. 3842 a Verona). Add 'Za.va.bs

buck o'er " T ' a town in Phrygia near Laodikeia (\V. Pape—G. E. Benseler IVorler-
1 y*nec**KAeH Eigennamen* Braunschweig 1875 ii. 1338).

a O f> Ae"' 7' 409 £' Serv- Verg- Aen- 7- 372' 4:o-
3 Ho^OSSbaCh m Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. iv. 2234.

1 Ov ' 3°' 11 ^ 1ua PauPer aquae Daunus agrestium | regnavit populoruni.

5 Lyk J, '4' 510 ^ ^pygis arida Dauni | arva.

~''a-a'<t>a.yo$ I "»I , T0^s (Is tpe/mov fivras w/iijffTai T&fov | Kpifovni. KolX-qs iv jxv%oi%

6 Tzet' "'S5 iKTif"-<>T<»> Aowitoi veupCiv \ eTT\o-Qvai xmot^ TpOX/uP^fi KaT-qpcQh.
^aUnia\ : l" Lyk- AL 105°- The story is told, with some variation (Brundisium, not

'* m lust. 12. 2. 7 ff.
 
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