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ΒΟΥΠΟΡΟΣ ΑΡΣΙΝΟΗΣ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2013

G. L. Huxley
Affiliation:
The Queen's University of Belfast

Extract

In the Coma Berenices (fr. 110.44-6 Pfeiffer) Callimachus mentioned Mount Athos and the canal dug for Xerxes at the northern end of the Akte peninsula:

      ἀμνά]μῳ[ν Θείης ἀργὸς ὑ]περφέ[ρ]ετ[αι,
      βουπόρος ᾿Αρσινόης μητρὸς σέο, καὶ διὰ μέ[σσου
      Μηδείων ὀλοαὶ νῆες ἔβησαν ᾿´ Αθω

Two problems require solutions in these lines: (1) Why is Athos called the ‘ox-piercer of Arsinoe’? (2) Who is the descendant of Theia? The second of these problems, I shall argue, is solved by the solution to the first.

Arsinoe, wife of Ptolemy II Philadelphus, is here given the courtesy-title ‘mother’ of Berenike. There is no difficulty in the poet’s association of her with Mount Athos: she had formerly been married to King Lysimachos of Thrace, who won Macedonia and Thessaly from Demetrius, and her ties with the northern Aegean world were close. As queen in Thrace she had made a dedication to the Great Gods of Samothrace;’ it was to Samothrace also that she came after Ptolemy Keraunos had murdered her sons by Lysimachos. Callimachus has these northern Aegean connexions of Arsinoe in mind in another poem, the Ektheosis Arsinoes, in which Chans sees from Athos the funeral smoke of the queen’s pyre at Alexandria (fr. 228.57), having been sent from Lemnos to the mountain by the spirit of Arsinoe’s dead sister Philotera (fr. 228.44-7).

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1980

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References

1 Fraser, P. M., Samothrace ii 1: The Inscriptions on Stone (New York 1960) 4850Google Scholar, no. 10.

2 Justin xxiv 3.9.

3 Fraser, P. M., Ptolemaic Alexandria ii (Oxford 1972) 1024Google Scholar.

4 Callimachus i (Oxford 1949) 115.

5 Loc. cit. (n. 3).

6 Callimachus, Loeb edn (London 1975) 82–3 note c.

7 Fraser (n. 3) i 25 and nn. 168, 169.

8 Et. Mag. s.v. Ἄθως (p. 26, 16 Gaisford). Schol. Theoc. vii 76d (p. 98 Wendel).

9 See e.g. Makarios 1.46 [ii 139 Leutsch-Schneidewin] and Suda (A 749, 1.71 Adler).

10 i 604.

11 i 603.

12 Pearson, A. C., The Fragments of Sophocles iii (repr. Amsterdam 1963) 27Google Scholar reports observations of travellers.

13 See n. 8 above.

14 See n. 9 above.