Zeus : a study in ancient religion . pag. 7. 12. 5, Euagrios hist. eccl. 2. 12, Synkell. chron. 348 A (i. 657Dindorf), Euseb. vers. Arnien. in ann. Ahr. 2130 ( = 116 ), Hieron. in Euseb. 2130 ( = ii6 ), Zonar. 11. 22 (iii. 68 f. Dindorf). II92 Appendix N Kdsios on Mount Kasion, where Julian offered a belated hecatomb^ Thedevotion of the Antiochenes to Zeus—a devotion grafted perhaps upon the^<3:rt!/-worship of their predecessors—might further be inferred from their coin-types. Antiochos iv Epiphanes (175—) inaugurated a system of municipalcoinage and struck coppers a


Zeus : a study in ancient religion . pag. 7. 12. 5, Euagrios hist. eccl. 2. 12, Synkell. chron. 348 A (i. 657Dindorf), Euseb. vers. Arnien. in ann. Ahr. 2130 ( = 116 ), Hieron. in Euseb. 2130 ( = ii6 ), Zonar. 11. 22 (iii. 68 f. Dindorf). II92 Appendix N Kdsios on Mount Kasion, where Julian offered a belated hecatomb^ Thedevotion of the Antiochenes to Zeus—a devotion grafted perhaps upon the^<3:rt!/-worship of their predecessors—might further be inferred from their coin-types. Antiochos iv Epiphanes (175—) inaugurated a system of municipalcoinage and struck coppers at Antiocheia near Daphne, which had as reversedesign Zeus wrapped in a himdtio?i with a wreath in his outstretched hand(fig. 996)2—gjg^ ^j^(j symbol of the Olympic sports that he held at Daphne^.Alexandres i Bala (150—145 ), who claimed to be the son of Antiochos iv,repeated his fathers type of a wreath-bearing Zeus*. Other Seleucid kingsin all probability issued coins with Zeus-types at Antiocheia, Demetrios ii.


Size: 1625px × 1538px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, booksubjectclassicalantiquities, booksubjectfol