Zeus : a study in ancient religion . os loc. cit. notes that rwt ^ewt might mean either Ad MctXix^wi orAcr/cXT/Trtwt{id. in thtjouifi. Intern, dArch. Num. 1901 iv. 503—507). ^ Ant. Skulpt. Berlin p. 271 no. 723 with fig., R. Kekule von Stradonitz Diegriech-ische Skulptur^ Berlin 1907 p. 202, P. Foucart in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1883 vii. 509no. 5, Harrison Proleg. Gk. Rel? pp. 17, 19 fig. 2, Reinach Rep. Reliefs ii. 31 no. 4 a stileof Hymettian marble without inscription. My fig. 946 is from a transparency in the col-lection of Newnham College, Cambridge. Height 0-42™, breadth 0*23 to 0*25^ The


Zeus : a study in ancient religion . os loc. cit. notes that rwt ^ewt might mean either Ad MctXix^wi orAcr/cXT/Trtwt{id. in thtjouifi. Intern, dArch. Num. 1901 iv. 503—507). ^ Ant. Skulpt. Berlin p. 271 no. 723 with fig., R. Kekule von Stradonitz Diegriech-ische Skulptur^ Berlin 1907 p. 202, P. Foucart in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1883 vii. 509no. 5, Harrison Proleg. Gk. Rel? pp. 17, 19 fig. 2, Reinach Rep. Reliefs ii. 31 no. 4 a stileof Hymettian marble without inscription. My fig. 946 is from a transparency in the col-lection of Newnham College, Cambridge. Height 0-42™, breadth 0*23 to 0*25^ Thegigantic snake approached by a woman and two men might, again, be either Zeus Met-Xixios or Asklepios. 70—2 iio8 Appendix M aliens, freedmen, or slaves. And Foucart suggests^ that they formed a thiasos ofPhoenician settlers, who had brought with them to the crowded port of AthensBaal Milik or Melek or Molok, their own Lord King2 : Ba^al they translatedas Zeus and Milik they transliterated as Milichios^. This view has commended. Fig. 944. ^ P. Foucart in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1883 vii. 511 ff., id. in Daremberg—SaglioZ>?V/.Ant. iii. 1700 f. 2 On the problematic Malakbaal- or Melekbaal-j/<?/rt:i see E. Meyer in Roscher i. 2871, ii. 3107, and on Moloch in general E. Meyer and A. Jeremias ib. ii. 3106 ff.,F. X. Kortleitner De polytheismo universo Oeniponte 1908 pp. 216—227. My friend andcolleague the Rev. Prof. R. H. Kennett has suggested that Moloch, to whom first-bornchildren were burnt by their parents in the valley of Hinnom,...may have been originallythe human king regarded as an incarnate deity: for this important hypothesis see FrazerGolden Bough^. Adonis Attis Osiris^ ii. 219 ff. (Moloch the King). ^ Cp. P. Foucart in the Bull. Corr. Hell. 1883 vii. 513 n. 4: M. Renan avait fait re-marquer que la forme la plus vraiseniblable est Milik, que la lefon A/a MiXtxiOJ se rencontre Zeus Meilichios 1109 dans plusieurs des manuscrits dEusebe ou est traduit u


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