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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#0558

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Rain of stones

might pass in the former case as the ring of Prometheus1, in the
latter as the wheel of Ixion2. These, however, were stray opinions
of doubtful date. More persistent is the idea that Engonasin was a
nameless sufferer—toiling, says Aratos3, at some unknown task,
tired and mournful, says Cicero4; weary and pitiable, says Germani-
cus5. Teukros of Babylon (c. 100 A.D.)6 went so far as to call him
Talas7 the Man of Sorrows.

Others attempted to identify the kneeling
figure with a definite mythical suppliant or the
like and in so doing took further constellations
into account. Araithos of Tegea (s. iv B.C.)8 made
him out to be Keteus, son of Lykaon and father of
Megisto (= Kallisto), lamenting the transforma-
tion of his daughter into Ursa Maior and be-
seeching the gods to restore her to him9.
Hegesianax (c. 200 B.C.)10 saw Theseus raising
the rock at Troizen beneath which lay his father's
sword11 (fig. 312)12: Lyra could then be viewed

1 SuPra »■ 329 n. o. Wissow*

2 A. Rehm in F. Boll Sphaera Leipzig 7903 p. 149 n. 4 and in Pauly
Real-Enc. v. 2564. ' ^

3 Arat. phaen. 63 ff. tt;5' airov /j-oyiovri KvklvSeraL avSpl ioucbs | etfiuhov- T^ ^j^lH

4 Cic. de nat. deor. 1. 108 defessa velut maerentis imago (a rendering of Aiati

= Cic. Arat. 65 Nobbe). si(luS.
6 Germ. Arat. 74 succiduis genibus lassum et miserabile sidus, 633 roiseraui ^ ^

6 Teukros of Babylon was an astrologer who at the end of s. i A.D. "'"'^^yfr/S**
Tro.pava.Tek\6vTuv, a work dealing with horoscopes (W. Christ Geschichte de*"?
Litteraiur* Munchen 1920 ii. 1. 416, 448). j£T<^"!'

7 F. Boll Sphaera Leipzig 1903 p. 278 f 0<s6s ns KctTctKityciXa Kel/J.evos, /caX«T<" -ggyptte11
Kal x6pa£ tjjavti avrov ttjs Ke<pd\7js codd. T.R. (two MSS. of Rhetorios,^ an^ ^gloif)-
astrologer of s. vi, who has preserved extracts from Teukros irepl r&v So eK^^0ji of'a
Teukros as a native of Babylon appears to perpetuate the old Babylonian tra
'fettered god.'

8 E. Schwartz in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. ii. 374. Araet'1115
» Araithos frag. 1 (Frag. hist. Gr. iv. 318 Mtiller) ap. Hyg. poet. astr. gt 0oH

autem Tegeates historiarum scriptor non Callisto, sed Megisto dicit appel a ' n0lllina1'''
Lycaonis, sed Cetei filiam, Lycaonis neptem; praeterea Cetea ipsum Engonasin tteiat
id. 2. 6 Araethus autem, ut ante diximus, hunc Cetea Lycaonis filium, " njxllS palm35
dicit; qui videtur, ut lamentans filiam in ursae figuram conversam, genu
diversas tendere ad caelum, ut earn sibi dii restituant. ., v;;, 2604 ''

10 F. Stahelin in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. vii. 2602 ff., F. Jacoby t6.

W. Christ Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur^ ii. 1.217^ fhesea • 1

11 Hyg. poet. astr. 2. 6 Hegesianax (Frag.gr. Hist. i. 525 Jacoby) autem ^ ell0P'11".
esse, qui Troezene saxum extollere videtur, quod existimatur Aegeus , jUStiB
(allopium cod. D. J. Molsheym cj. Pelopium. Heinsius, with more Sen^°°sse legen^ia
tion (see Gerhard Gr. Myth. ii. 231), cj. Cecropitim. B. Bunte says: ' 01orthern £u
est ellopum ex Gr. iWoiroi (quid!). But, if Ellopia was a district in no
 
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