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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#0877

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782 The owl of Athena

swallow1, and a bird of indeterminate kind2. The precise species
would depend on local conditions. At Korone in Messenia, where
Pausanias3 saw a bronze statue of Athena holding a crow, the
goddess herself may have been symbolised by her attribute4. At
Megara, where a headland projected into the sea, there was a well-

Fig. 577-

W. Thompson op. cit. p. 180. But E. Pottier in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1908 xxxii- 538
prefers 'osprey.'

1 Od. 22. 239 f. 2 Od. 1. 320.

3 Paus. 4. 34. 6. C. Robert in the Arch. Zeit. 1882 xl. 173 mentions among objec
recently found in Italy, especially in Hadrian's Villa, 'eine Bronzestatuette der AtheI1'
mit einer Krahe auf dem Arme.' ^

4 Gruppe Gr. Myth. Rel. p. 844 n. 2 ' Koronis, von Poseidon verfolgt, wird ^C t

Athena in eine Krahe verwandelt (Ov. M 2 536—632...): das ist wahrscheinlich der
• u earn''

einer Legende, in der die Gottin selbst die Gestalt des Vogels annahm.' To tlie

effect A. Kiock in the Archiv f. Rel. 1915 xviii. 127 f. 0

A Boeotian plate in the British Museum shows inter alia the sacrifice of an °x

Athena. Behind the goddess is her snake, and a Doric column to indicate her te,v^^

Before her is an altar from which flames are rising, while a bird-—crow rather than co ^

is perched proudly on the top of it (Sir C. Smith in the Joum. Hell. Stud. i. 202"^ g0

('a crow') pi. 7 (part of which = my_fig^57j), Brit. Mus. Cat. Vases ii. 76 f. n0- £

('either a crow, or a cock'), W.'Reichel fiber vorhellenische Gotlerculte Wien 1897 P'

fig. 11 ('der Krahe'), S. Wide in the Sertum philologicum Carolo Ferdinaudo

oblaticm Goteborg 1910 p. 63 pi. 1, 1 ('ein Vogel'), Pfuhl Malerei u. Zeichnung ^s j0

i. 207 with n. 1 iii. 39 fig. 169). Such a position no doubt implies that the bird stan^,j//.

a special relation to the deity (Miss E. M. Douglas (Mrs Van Buren) in /"'""'^c^

Stud. 1912 xxxii. 174 f. well compares a black-figured amphora in the Archaeo ^

Seminar at Upsala (fig. i=my fig. 578) and an engraved gold ring of c. 400 B.C- y

British Museum (Brit. Mus. Cat. Finger Rings p. 13 no. 59 pi. 2) (fig- 2 = my ^e

In the one case the owl on the altar betokens a sacrifice to Athena: in the o j

eagle on the altar spells a sacrifice to Zeus), but hardly amounts to a demonst

ornithomorphism.
 
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