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- W2074927111 abstract "According to an elegy which Pythagoras is said to have written at Delphi, Apollo, the son of Seilenos, was slain by the Python and buried in the so-called tripod which received its name from the fact that the three daughte-rs of Triopas mourned him.2 That this strange reversal of Delphic tradition was Pyth-agorean is suggested by the statement of Hesychios that the Pythagorean name for the tripod was rpt'oi.3 The only other record of the death of Apollo is that of MVinaseas who assembled and published the oracles of Delphi.4 He says that Apollo was killed by a thunderbolt of Zeus, and was carried out to burial. In this version Apollo may lhave been confused with his son Amphiaraos, who entered the earth through an opening made by a thunderbolt. Be that as it may, the Delphic elegy may not be dismissed as a later fancy of no value. The mention of the daughters of Triopas at once directs attention to Knidos. It was a Lacedaemonian colony founded by Triopas,6 whence their territory was called Triopion.7 One tradition made him a son of Helios.8 The Dorian hexapolis to which Knidos belonged celebrated games at the temple of the Triopian Apollo.9 Three other members of the confederacy were the Rhodian cities Ialysos, Lindos, and Kamiros whose founders were the children of Helios, and this Helios the son of Akantho.'0 Triopas looks like an early Apollo of solar character. In view of his importance in Apolline tradition in the region of Knidos it is not surprising that the Knidians dedicated a statue of Triopas at Delphi.1 Other dedications of the same city at the same sanctuary and possibly at the same time included images of Leto, Apollo, and Artemis, a group showing the Apolline company kept by Triopas. The possible relationship of Triopas to Akantho becomes the more likely in the presence of a city Akanthos in the Knidian Chersonese.12 For another city so named one turns to Egypt where south of Memphis Strabo found an Akanthos with an important sanctuary of Osiris and a grove of akanthos.3 Further at Abydos, where was the burial place of the same god, there was a sanctuary, according to Hellanikos,4 with white and black" @default.
- W2074927111 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W2074927111 date "1941-10-01" @default.
- W2074927111 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2074927111 title "The Akanthos Column at Delphi" @default.
- W2074927111 doi "https://doi.org/10.2307/146669" @default.
- W2074927111 hasPublicationYear "1941" @default.
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