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Search results for pi,2954 in Adler number:
Headword:
Prônes
Adler number: pi,2954
Translated headword: forelands, headlands
Vetting Status: high
Translation: [Meaning] prominences of mountains, hills.[1]
In the Epigrams: "you [sc. Heracles] that also tread Oeta and the deep-forested headland of Pholoe [...]."[2] And elsewhere: "by the headland Charicles dedicated this hairy billy-goat."[3] And elsewhere: "he [sc. a priest of Cybele] was wandering the forested headlands [sc. of Mount Ida]."[4]
Also attested is [sc. the uncontracted form] prew/n, [genitive] preo/nos[5]
"[Nymphs' spring-rich caverns,] which shed so much water down from this crooked foreland."[6]
Greek Original:Prônes: orôn exochai, bounoi. en Epigrammasi: hos te kai Oitên kai bathun eudendrou prôna pateis Pholoês. kai authis: lasion para prôna Chariklês antheto tragon. kai authis: eudendrou prônas ebounobatei. legetai de kai Preôn, preonos. hai tosson hudôr eibousai skoliou toude kata preonos.
Notes:
The headword, quoted from somewhere (probably
Pindar,
Nemean Odes 4.52), is a masculine noun in the nominative and vocative plural; see generally LSJ s.v.
prw/n, and cf.
pi 2244.
[1] The headword is identically glossed by
Photius'
Lexicon (pi1452 Theodoridis), the
Synagoge, and
Lexica Segueriana 353.29; cf.
Hesychius s.v.
prw/onas; Apollonius Sophistes,
Homeric Lexicon 136.30; and
Homer,
Iliad 16.299 (web address 1), with scholion (=
scholia vetera), where a Danaan counter-attack on the Trojans is likened to Zeus parting thick clouds from a foreland. Adler also cites
Lexicon Ambrosianum 1129 and 1191.
[2]
Greek Anthology 6.3.1-2 (
Dionysius),
Dionysius dedicates a club cut from an olive tree to Heracles; cf. Gow and Page,
Hellenistic Epigrams, vol. I (81); vol. II (234-235); and another extract from this epigram at
alpha 370. Since the dedicator has the same name as the epigrammatist, Gow and Page find (ibid.) the attribution open to question. Mount Oeta (Oita) is in south-central Greece (Barrington Atlas map 55 grid C3); cf.
alpha 2612 (end). Mount Pholoe, between Arcadia and Elis, is in the north-western Peloponnesus (Barrington Atlas map 58 grid B2). As related by
Diodorus Siculus 4.12.3-7, Heracles encountered the Centaur Pholos (Pholus; cf.
phi 566 and OCD(4) s.v. Centaurs) at the latter's cave on the eponymous mountain.
[3]
Greek Anthology 6.32.3-4 (
Agathias Scholasticus); cf.
iota 387,
kappa 1850, and
pi 201. See further extracts from this epigram at
delta 1107 and
lambda 717.
[4]
Greek Anthology 6.218.2 (
Alcaeus), the dedication of a eunuch priest of Cybele (Kybele, a Phrygian goddess, cf.
kappa 2586) who escaped from a lion by beating his timbrels; cf. Gow and Page,
Hellenistic Epigrams, vol. I, 9 and further extracts from this epigram at
alpha 388,
gamma 158,
theta 526,
pi 952,
tau 316, and
omega 89. The reference to Ida in the epigram is evidently the mountain in the Troad (Gow and Page,
Hellenistic Epigrams, vol. II, 24-26), present-day Turkey's Kaz Daği (Barrington Atlas map 56 grid D2). (Another Mount Ida is on the island of Crete (Barrington Atlas map 60 grid C2); cf.
iota 90,
iota 92, and
iota 101.)
[5] cf. already
pi 2244.
[6]
Greek Anthology 6.253.1-2 (Krinagoras/
Crinagoras), a dedication by Sosander the hunter to Hermes, Pan, and the Nymphs; cf.
pi 2244,
epsiloniota 14 (but with
fre/atos,
from a well), and
sigma 937 (Gow and Page,
Garland of Philip, vol. I, 224-225 and vol. II, 254-255).
References:
A.S.F. Gow and D.L. Page, The Greek Anthology: Hellenistic Epigrams, vol. II, (Cambridge 1965)
A.S.F. Gow and D.L. Page, The Greek Anthology: Hellenistic Epigrams, vol. I, (Cambridge 1965)
A.S.F. Gow and D.L. Page, The Greek Anthology: The Garland of Philip, vol. I, (Cambridge 1968)
A.S.F. Gow and D.L. Page, The Greek Anthology: The Garland of Philip, vol. II, (Cambridge 1968)
Associated internet address:
Web address 1
Keywords: botany; definition; dialects, grammar, and etymology; epic; gender and sexuality; geography; imagery; military affairs; mythology; poetry; religion; zoology
Translated by: Ronald Allen on 7 October 2010@01:23:21.
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