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Sabazios - E. N. Lane: Corpus Cultus Iovis Sabazii (CCIS), III: Conclusions. (Études Préliminaires aux Religions Orientates dans l'Empire Romain, 100.3.) Pp. ix + 68; 2 plates. Leiden, New York, Copenhagen and Cologne: Brill, 1989. Paper, fl. 60.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2009

Ken Dowden
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham

Abstract

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Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1991

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References

1 Johnson, S. E., ‘The Present State of Sabazios Research’, ANRW II 17.3 (1984), pp. 15831613Google Scholar, though he gives only a limited idea of how we got to our ‘present state’. Useful, if briefer, discussion of the cult and bibliography: Fellmann, R., ‘Der Sabazios-Kult’, in Vermaseren, M. J. (ed.) Die orientalischen Religionen an Römerreich, Leiden, 1981Google Scholar (Études Préliminaires, no. 93). Truth to tell, there is still much merit in H. Schaefer's article in RE 1A (1920), 1540–51 as well as in Fauth's, W. in the Kleine Pauly 4 (1975), 14781480Google Scholar.

2 It is not clear to me that L. had successfully refuted Turcan's identification of Sabazios on Dionysos sarcophagi (which are scarcely immune from ‘literary’ and intellectual traditions): his dismissal of the attributes which Turcan identifies looked rather cavalier (L. in Numen, see n. 3 below, pp. 21f.; Turcan, R., ‘Dionysus Dimorphos’, MEFRA 70 (1958), 243293CrossRefGoogle Scholar, esp. 279f.). Perhaps too we can still believe that the identification with Dionysos is the result of a genuine, but aberrant early interpretatio graeca.

3 Lane, E. N., ‘Towards a definition of the iconography of Sabazios’, Numen 27 (1980), 933Google Scholar. He has also influenced Johnson (op. cit. 1583 n. 2).

4 Kretschmer, P., Einleitung in die Geschichte der griechischen Sprache, Göttingen, 1896, 195198Google Scholar.

5 Kurios, RE 12 (1925), 176; epekoos, Weinreich, O., Athenische Mitteilungen, 37 (1912), 168Google Scholar esp. 5–25 – for which L. fobs us off with a reference to his work on Men.