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Search results for kappa,2116 in Adler number:
Headword:
Korubantiai
Adler number: kappa,2116
Translated headword: celebrates the Korybant rites, is in a frenzy
Vetting Status: high
Translation: [Meaning he/she/it] is mad, or dances, or is possessed.[1]
Also [sc. attested is] sugkorubantia/santes ["they having celebrated the Korybant rites together"], [meaning] they having gone mad together. "The army, all of them frenzied and shouting war cries and banging their weapons, jumped into the river."[2]
Also [sc. attested is] korubantiw=n ["celebrating the Korybant rites"], [meaning] [someone] being in ecstasy, being mad.[3]
Greek Original:Korubantiai: mainetai, ê orcheitai, ê daimonai. kai Sunkorubantiasantes, summanentes. ho de stratos sunkorubantiasantes kai epalalaxantes hapantes kai tois hoplois epidoupêsantes esêlanto es ton potamon. kai Korubantiôn, enthousiôn, mainomenos.
Notes:
On the Korybantes see already
kappa 2114,
kappa 2115. The Phrygian ecstatic dances were used to refer to frenzy in general.
[1] Likewise or similarly in other lexica; see the references at
Photius kappa985 Theodoridis. The headword must be quoted from somewhere. Extant possibilities include:
Philo Judaeus,
On Dreams 2.1;
Themistius,
*basanisth\s h)\ filo/sofos 253a;
Libanius,
Letters 299.2;
Palladius,
Dialogue on the Life of Chrysostom p. 138 Coleman-Norton.
[2] Quotation unidentifiable. (This verb, first in
Plato, also occurs in
sigma 1297.)
[3] Masculine nominative singular of this present participle; cf. the plural forms
korubantiw=ntes in
Plato,
Crito 54D,
Ion 533E, 536C, and
korubantiw/ntwn in
Symposium 215E.
Keywords: definition; dialects, grammar, and etymology; historiography; history; military affairs; philosophy; religion
Translated by: Nick Nicholas on 3 February 2009@01:08:47.
Vetted by:
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