ADDITIONAL NOTES 



'AETO'I. 



Add the following references, concerning the Eagle in connexion 

 with the sacred Olive : Nonn. Dion. xl. 523 tyevriov opviv eXairjs, cf. ibid. 

 470 ; ibid. 493 opoxpovov (s. opoxpoov) opviv Am'?/?. The Eagle sacrificed 

 to Neptune, ibid. 494. Add also the epithet xP WI/ j Lye. 260. 



'AHAfl'N. 



Hesychius states that 'AjySco*/ was a surname or epithet of Athene 

 among the Pamphylians. The connexion between Athene and the 

 Nightingale or the Adonis-myth, lies perhaps in the fact that Athene 

 or Minerva was associated, as for instance in the cylindrical zodiac of 

 the Louvre, with the sign and month of the vernal equinox. Just as 

 Adonis or Attis was, in like manner, a Spring-god and god of the 

 opening flowers ; Porph. ap. Euseb. P. E. iii. 11, p. no et seq. 



While I am still convinced of a connexion between the attributes of 

 drj8(oi/ and the veiled allusions to the mysteries of Adonis, I am inclined 

 to admit that some of the minor arguments adduced by me in support 

 of this hypothesis are overstrained : in particular the interpretation 

 given (pp. 13, 14) of Thuc. ii. 29, and the suggested connexion between 

 Daulis, dao-vs, Duzi. 



'AAEKTPYil'N. 



In preparing the article dXeKTputuy, I neglected to consult Baethgen, 

 De Vi et Signific. Galli in Relig. et Art. Gr. et Romanorum, Diss. 

 Inaug., Getting. 1887, in which paper will be found (among other 

 matters) a valuable account of monumental and numismatic representa- 

 tions of the Cock. 



The Cock on coins of Himera (vide supra, p. 26) is traced by 

 Baethgen (p. 35) to an association with Aesculapius ; cf. C. I. Gr. 

 Nr. 5747 'Ao-K\a7ricp KOI 'l/uepa Trora^w 6 dapos . . . ^(orrjpo-iv. See also 

 Head, Hist. Numorum, p. 125. 



TE'AAIOI, a name for the Hoopoe ; vide s. v. 



