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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

DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14698#0911

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816 The owl of Athena

no. B 390 Tharros in Sardinia). Her priestess or worshipper similarly has a shallow
basket containing two pomegranates, which she holds in her left hand against her breast
{ib. p. 281 f. no. c 798 Benghazi). A tomb-painting from Nola, now at Berlin, shows
Persephone, or more probably a dead woman, seated on a throne, holding a pomegranate
in her left hand against her breast and a flower in her uplifted right hand (E. Gerhard !P
the Arch. Zeit. 1850 viii. 145 ff. pi. 14 ( = my fig. 623), Reinach Vases Ant. p. 88 f- p''
Millin u, 78, 9, Farnell Cults of Gk. States hi. 228 pi. 11, F. Weege in the Jahrb.
kais. deutsch. arch. Inst. 1909 xxiv. 130 (s. v or iv), M. H. Swindler Ancient PainttW

On the pomegranate in relation to Persephone see further L. Stephani in the (g73
rendu St. Pit. 1859 P- '31 f- Atlas pi. 4, 2, 1865 pp. 10 no. 14, 77 Atlas pi- 3>
p. 16 and B. Ashmole in the Journ. Hell. Stud. 1922 xlii. 250. nate 1,1

In view of the foregoing evidence it is reasonable to conclude that a poitieg^^.^ ^0fi
the hand of a deity implied perpetual regeneration and was virtually regarded aSjT)egi»r)Jl^
the Tree of Life. Polykleitos' chryselephantine Hera was enthroned with a p° ^ br"11^
in one hand, a sceptre in the other (Paus. 2. 17. 4: supra i. [34, iii- 65 ^'omegr3"'lt
statue representing Milon the Olympic victor as standing on a diskos with a P
 
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