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The Floating Chest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

N. M. Holley
Affiliation:
Bedford College, London

Extract

In his Handbook of Greek Mythology Professor H. J. Rose several times draws attention to the legendary theme of the floating chest, which occurs so frequently as to suggest that ‘some kind of ritual lies behind all these tales’. The theme is recognised by Dr. A. B. Cook (Zeus II, 671 sqq.) as one of the perennials of folk-lore, and parallels are cited from modern Europe, Siberia, and India. A study by M. E. Cosquin (‘Le Lait de la Mère et le Coffre Flottant’ in Revue des Questions Historiques, 1908), based on material drawn from North Africa, India, and Java as well as the Classical world, links the floating chest to the miraculous suckling of children.

The preservation of a child or a mother and child in a floating chest was obviously a good story, and Euripides, by choosing this version of the Telephus legend in preference to that which left the child exposed on land, no doubt contributed to its popularity. Moreover, in legends of the introduction of a new cult the story teller often required a miraculous means of transport. The chest may have served a similar purpose to the floating rock of Celtic saints. But these explanations are not sufficient to account for the recurrence of the chest in a large number of stories which have important common elements.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1949

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References

1 As suggested by Marx, F., who collects the Greek chest stories, in AM X 21 sq.Google Scholar ‘Broncemuenze von Elaia.”

2 Brugsch, , ÄZ 1881, 77 sqq.Google Scholar; Junker, Mysteriendes Osiris; Junker, , ‘Götterdekret’ in Denk. Kais. Ak. Wiss. Wien, Ph.- Hist. Kl. 56–8Google Scholar; Gressman, Tod und Auferstehung des Osiris; Frazer, A.A.O. II 110–11.

3 Hyg., Fab. 277Google Scholar; Min. Fel. Oct. 23; Lact, . Div. Inst. 121Google Scholar.

4 I am indebted to Professor G. Thomson for pointing out this connexion, as for many fruitful ideas. My thanks are also due to Dr. M. Kerr, formerly of the Department of Psychology in this College, for the insight which she gave me into the possible meaning of this ritual.