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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#0486

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414 Water-carrying in connexion

Babelon Moan. gr. rom. ii. 3. 1029 ff. pi. 261, 5—S, Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins Crete etc.
p. 28 ff. pi. 7, 4. 7, 15, Hunter Cat. Coinsii. 179 ff. pi. 41, 8 (= my fig. 280), 11, 12 (=my
fig. 281), 14 (= my fig. 282), McClean Cat. Coins ii. 492 f. pi. 239, 9, 13, Weber Cat-
Coins ii. 521 f. nos. 4437, 4446 pi. 161, Head Hist, num^ p. 463 f. fig. 247) have
for reverse type, not Miletos, son of Apollon by Akakallis daughter of Minos,
suckled by a wolf (Rasche Lex. Num. ii. 1134 'lupa infantem lactans, vel cerua est,
Mileto vbera praebens.' Ant. Lib. 30 (after Nikandros irepoiovp,(vwv j3') tovtov ?7
'A/cciKaXXis Selcraaa Mb a e^efiaXev els tV v\t]v, Kal airbv iTntpoirwvTei XbKoi §ov\XI
'A7r6XXwvos et/wXcn-Toe Kal bipeyov 7ra/)a fitpos yd\a), nor yet Kydon, the eponymous
founder of the town, suckled by a bitch (so first W. Wroth in the Brit. Mus. Cat. Coins
Crete etc. p. xxxiii, followed by most modern authorities. Wroth notes that Kydon, Hke
Miletos, was a son of Akakallis by Apollon (Steph. Byz. s.v. Kvdwvia, cp. schol. Od. lt)-
176. Schol. vet. Theokr. 7. 12 c p. 83, 1 f. Wendel says, by Hermes, cp. Alex. Polyhist-
frag. 32 (Frag. hist. Gr. iii. 231 f. Miiller) ap. schol. Ap. Rhod. 4. 1492), though
admittedly ' no legends of his infancy are related in the Authors'), but Zeus nurtured by a

Fig. 283.

hound—a contention insufficiently supported by the thunderbolt, which on certain SP _
mens (e.g. fig. 281) appears as a symbol beside the type. W. Aly in Philologu
lxviii. 430 n. 8 proposes to connect Zeus Ski/XXios of Crete, Dionysos SKiAAiras of J^'^e
SkuXX^s the mythical diver of Skione (Hdt. 8. 8) with 2/a)XXa. This amounts to the ^
thing, ifSkyllawas early interpreted as o-KiiXaf (Od. i2.8sff. tvBa 8' M SkiSX^0 ^■

XeXaxi/ia ' | rrjs -!}toi ipuvy] p.h oar\ (TKukaicos veoyi\fjs | yiverai, avrr] 0' aire »—'jyfino?11
fc.r.X.) and perhaps represented as a dog (on a clay seal-impression of the Middle ^ ^

in
in

later semi-human form she remains essentially connected with dogs (O. Waser Skyla' ^
Charybdis in der Literatur und Kunst der Griechen und Rbmer Zurich iS°4 P" tjie
I figure a few characteristic examples: (a) a 'Melian' relief from Aigir>a noVA^d-
British Museum (Brit. Mus. Cat. Terracottas p. 135 no. B 374, E. Vinet in the ^
Inst. 1843 xv. 194 f., Mon. d. Inst, iii pi. 53, 2, P. Jacobsthal Die melis.te0g&
Berlin—Wilmersdorf 1931 p. 54 f- no. 71 pi. 34 (= my fig. 284). Height 48 r-at.
7 ins.). (/;) A silver tetradrachm of Akragas, struck 413—406 B.C. (Brtt- ^
Coins Sicily p. 12 no. 61 fig., McClean Cat. Coins i. 239 pi. 65, 13. Imhoof-Blun

iii period (1700—1580 B.C.) from Knossos published by Sir A.J. Evans in ' .~ ]ys
Brit. Sch. Ath. 1902—1903 ix. 57 f. fig. 36 (= my fig. 283 : scale f) and da capo ^ ^
Palace of Minos London 1921 i. 697 f. fig. 520 as 'Prototype of Skylla')- ^veo ^
 
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