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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#0946

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The aigts and Gorgoneion of Athena 847

more impressed by the platyrrhine negroid aspect of early Gorgoneia,
which prompts me to guess that their archetype came from north
Africa. If so, Euripides1 was not far wrong when he spoke of
' Libyan Gorgons.'

Fig. 660.

a Fig. 661. b

1 Eur. Bacch. 990 f. XeatVas 54 twos 55' ^ Vopybvwp \ Ai^vffcdf yivos. W. H. Roscher
'< Gorgotun und Verwandtes Leipzig 1879 P- 27 5° CP- Aristoph. ran. 477 Topybves
^dp&aiai with schol. R. ad loc. Icffpao-iar <Ti0pa<ros> tokos ttjs Aif3vr)s < Ma ai Vopybvts
L^Tpi-fiov > | Hdt. 2. 91 otaovTO. (sc. tov Ilepaia) £k Ai^irjs tt;v Yopyovs Ke<pa\ijv, Diod.
52 ff. Kara ttjv Ai(3utjv .. .t6 te yap tCjv Yopybvoiv 'idvos, £0' 5 Xeyerai tov Xlepaia
aTPaTeWa.l, k.t.X., Paus. 2. 31. 5 ml is ras p.ax"-s yyeiaBai (sc. Trjv MeSovaav) tois Alfivtn,
g '/• 3 Repo-eiS' is Ai^Or/v Kal iirl Midovaav wpp.-qp.ivip, Iuv. 12. 4 pugnanti (sc. Minervae)
^ rS°ne Maura, schol. vet. Pind. Pyth. 10. 72 b ai 5i Topybves Kara p.iv Tivas ev tois

l07riKois...Ko.Ta 5i Tivas eni twv irepixTuiv tt/s Ai/iv-qs..., etc.
^ Dt Gorgone Amstelodami 1885 pp. 94—97 discusses, but rejects, the suggestion

a the Gorgon was derived from the Egyptian Bes (cp. supra ii. 457). It remains,
Wever, highly probable that this godling with his pygmy stature and Sudani traits
Corf20"6 Dizion- diMitel. Egiz. pp. 202—221 pis. 73—81, Sir E. A. Wallis Budge The
p s °f the Egyptians London 1904 ii. 284—288 with two figs, and col. pi., id. From
pQ to God in ancient Egypt Oxford 1934 pp. 253—255 with two figs.), his apotropaic
ari[jErs (W. M. Flinders Petrie Amulets London 1914 p. 40 f. nos. 188—190 pis. 33
aff ? an<^ n's curious attachment to the full-face view (supra ii. 674 figs. 611, 612)
face S a rea' ana'°8y t0 the Libyan Gorgon. His wrinkled forehead and nose, broad
Bes' ru ^an8ing tongue are comparable features. And it must not be forgotten that
K S \ 6 . Gorgon, was connected with snakes (Lanzone op. cit. p. 211 pi. 79, 2,
Sir 'n ^auty—Wissowa Real-Enc. iii. 325 'als Abwehrer der schadlichen Tiere,'
and ' ■ Wallis Budge From Fetish to God in ancient Egypt p. 254 'a slayer of serpents
a kinds of noxious animals') and on occasion was represented in female form
 
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