Artigo Revisado por pares

A Note on the Deity of Alcman's Partheneion

1965; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 15; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0009838800008843

ISSN

1471-6844

Autores

A. F. Garvie,

Tópico(s)

Classical Antiquity Studies

Resumo

The recurrence of horse-imagery in Alcman's Partheneion (47 ff., 50, 58-59, 92) suggested to Bowra that the chorus may have been the guild of priestesses called Leucippides, who seem from a mysterious gloss in Hesychius to have been known as It is true that the comparison of girls with fillies is common enough in Greek, but the appearance of Helen as of girls like at Ar. Lys. 1308–15 seems, as Bowra says, ‘to hide a ritual use of ’. The existence of this guild of priestesses appears to be established from Paus. 3. 16. 1 and 3. 13. 7. In the latter passage they join with the in offering sacrifice to Dionysus and the unnamed hero who first guided him to Sparta, but it seems reasonable to assume that their principal concern was with the cult of the goddesses Phoebe and Hilaeira, the daughters of Leucippus, from whom, as Pausanias explicitly says (3. 13. 7), they took their name.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX