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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#0794

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The birth of Athena in art 701

by Philostratos of Lemnos (born c. 190 A.D.1) in a rhetorical
description of the scene as portrayed in a picture-gallery at
Naples2. Schwerzek has restored her as enthroned in the right
place3. But we want a rock-seat, not a throne. And it so happens
that on the east frieze of the Hephaisteion (' Theseion '*), a temple
whose sculptures owe much to direct imitation of the Parthenon5,
we find Hera sitting on a rock in just the requisite attitude. I have
transferred her bodily from Sauer's drawing of the ' Theseion'
frieze6 to my restoration of the Parthenon pediment7, not of course
as a certain, but at least as a possible or even probable, figure in the
composition8.

Sir J. E. Sandys A History of Classical Scholarship- Cambridge 1906 i. 336.
Philostr. mai. imagg. 2. 27. 2 kclI ovdt 7-77S "Hpas tl ocivbv (.vravda, yeyrjde ws av
e' koX avTrjs iyhero.

K. Schwerzek Erlduterungen zu dem Versuch einer Kekonstrnktion des bstlichen
Pa-rthenongiebels Wien 1904 p. 21 with pi. ( = my pi. lvii, 3).
Supra p. 223 n. 6.

Overbeck Gr. Plastift i. 461 ff., B. Sauer Das sogenanntc Theseion und sein
plaslischer Schmuck Leipzig 1899 p. 209 ff.
• Sauer op. cit. pi. 3, 7 with over-leaf.
Supra ii pi. xxxiii.

8 Again I would draw attention to three fragments of the pedimental sculptures
e"tant at Athens (figs. 519—521).

0"e is a large female head (height o-35m), which J. Six in the Journ. Hell. Stud.
'9" xxxi. 66 f. fig. 2 described as 'a nearly formless block.' That is a bit too severe.
' ■ H. Smith in the Brit. Mus. Cat. Sculpture i. 198 no. 339, 2 and in The Sculptures of
le Parthenon London 1910 p. 22 frag. 15 pi. 14 A had been content to say 'much
placed.' Poi nts deserving of emphasis are these. It was certainly a veiled female head,
appears to have worn a head-band or stephdne. And in both respects it resembles the
eraofthe Hephaisteion ('Theseion').
 
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