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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#0488

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4i6 Water-carrying in connexion

exit pointed out to him by Hermes. On the left Sisyphos, lashed
by an Erinys, vainly pushes his great stone up a hill. On the right
Tantalos suffers perpetual terrors on account of an overhanging
rock, which threatens to crush him1. At their feet flows the river
Acheron, with a duck pecking here and there and asphodel growing

dog's head). Indeed, it is not impossible that 2kv\\cl ab initio meant 'Dog' (O. Waser in
Roscher Lex. Myth. iv. 1071, J. Schmidt in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. iii A. 658. Cp-
Hesych. s. vv. KiWa- onffkaS- (so I. Voss for /ci/XXas. m)Aa{ cod.). 'HXeioi and o-kvXXov' TW
Kiva Xtyovviv, et. mag. p. 720, 19 f. cr/ciiXos • Kvplios cttI twos veoyvov • curd tov H^XaV
eirl to SKanTav, <r/ci5Xaf ris &v. "fipos = Zonar. lex. s.v. aKvXKot = Favorin. lex. p.
18 ff. (reading, rightly, (rxiJXaf tU div) and Tzetz. Ml. 6. 482 rb Se KafdaOX-qs AvdiKW
tov o-KyKoirviKT-qv \{yei with schol. ad loc. in Cramer anecd. Oxon. iii. 351, 5 ff. citing
Hipponax frag. 4 Diehl, 45 Knox 'Ep/u.fj Kwdyxa MjoMori KavSavXa (cited also by TeW-

Fig. 287.

Abar

rt des

in II. p. 843 Bachmann)), and that as a mythical monster she was 'eine ' f)llls
Totenhundes' (Pfister Rel. Gr. Rom. 1930 p. 166). Be that as it may, E. Maass inMe dje
1891 xxvi. 188 derives Dionysos S/ci/XX/ras from crxiiXXoi 'die Hunde, besonc

Seehunde, von denen die griechischen Gewasser wimmelten,' cp. W. Aly in . *^ j,est
1909 lxviii. 430 n. 8. But that Zeus SkuXXios had anything to do with dogs 1S ^ \,y
a remote possibility. And Dionysos S/cuXXiras is explained with far greater proba ^.^lt
W. R. Paton—E. L. Hicks The Inscriptions of Cos Oxford 1891 p. 86, H. ^0
Quaesliones Coae mythologae Gryphiswaldiae 1891 p. 62 f., Nilsson Gr. Feste p- 3 '
quote Hesych. <tkuXX(s' tcXy/tarls = Favorin. lex. p. 1663, 18. ( faiit^0

1 The literary evidence for Tantalos is most fully collected by J. E. Hyien lQ gcjieUer
Upsalia; 1896 pp. 1—129. But the best survey of all our sources is that given by ■ ggg pp.
in Roscher Lex. Myth. v. 75—86. See also E. Thraemer Pergamos Leipz'g ^ ^/MS
84—99 ('Tantalos'), S. Reinach in the Rev.
et religions Paris 1906 ii. 177—182), Gruppe

A Handbook of Greek Mythology London 1928 pp. 81, 97 (slight). ctual man-

It is within the bounds of possibility that Tantalos began his career as an bin1
G. Poisson'Tantale, roidesHittites ' in ihzRev. Arch. 1925 ii. 75—94seeks to' ,jj,e
with Todhalijas (S. A. Cook in The CambridgeAncientHistory'Cambridge 1923 u?*gtf0&>
name of Tidal of Goiim ("peoples, hordes") [Gen. 14. i, 9] may be the Hittite jjfic»-
known in the thirteenth century'), and R. J. H. Jenkins, accepting Poisson

-o. Arch. 1903 i. 172—177 CtuW' Rose

pe Gr. Myth. Rel. p. 277 f. (helpful). »• ■!'
 
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