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Onomakles and the Alopekonnesians

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2013

G. L. Huxley
Affiliation:
The American School of Classical Studies at Athens

Extract

Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 3711 discusses Lesbian antiquities. In column ii lines 31 to 36 a quotation from Alkaios is followed by remarks upon Alopekonnesians who settled at Ainos. The passage quoted from Alkaios is already known (130 L.-P. 130 b 9–11 Voigt [P. Oxy. 2165, fr. 1 ii 17–19’), but the new evidence in the lemma has enabled the editor, M. W.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1987

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References

1 Jeffery, L. H., Archaic Greece (London and Tonbridge 1976) 8990Google Scholar.

2 Excavations were conducted during the Gallipoli campaign and again in the period from August 1920 to January 1921: BCH xxxix (1915) 135240Google Scholar; CRAI (1915) 268–9; (1916) 40–7; (1921) 130–6.Boardman, J., The Greeks overseas (London 1980) 265Google Scholar.

3 167.17 L./P. (167.17 Voigt). Cf. 428 ab L./P. (468, 469 Voigt). Page, Denys, Sappho and Alcaeus (Oxford 1955) 152–61Google Scholar.

4 Eusebios, Chron. i, p. 92 Karst. Eusebios states that Phrynon won in the stadion, but Diogenes Laertios (i, 74). calls him victor in the pankration (RE xx 1. 929 s.v. ‘Phrynon [1]).

5 Armen. Vers. Ol. 43.2, Ann. Abr. 1409, Chron.-Kanon p. 186 Karst. Hieron. Ol. 43.2, p. 98 b Helm.2Mosshammer, A. A., The Chronicle of Eusebius and Greek Chronographic Tradition (Lewisburg 1979) 246–54Google Scholar.

6 Strabo vii fr. 52 Meineke. Skylax §67 (GGM i 55). ATL i. 468.

7 Hutton, C. A., BSA xxi (1914/1915 and 1915/6) 166–8Google Scholar.

8 Ephoros FGrH 70 F 39. Apollodoros 244 F 184 (Steph. Byz. s.v. ‘Αῖνος’, p. 52, 9–10 Meineke). Topography of Ainos: Hasluck, F. W., BSA xv (1908/1909) 249–57Google Scholar. May, J. M. F., Ainos. Its history and coinage (Oxford 1950) 17Google Scholar.

9 In P. Oxy. 3711 ii 36 who are the Thracians and what are they doing? Near Alopekonnesos in the Chersonese they would be Dolonkoi (Herodotos vi. 34.1–2). At Poltymbria-Ainos they would be Apsinthioi: Ἄψινθος was another name of Ainos (Steph. Byz. p. 52.1 Meineke). Apsinthians were warlike (Herodotos loc. cit.) and engaged in human sacrifice (Herodotos ix. 119.1); so the settlers at Ainos are likely to have been attacked. Compare the Klazomenians whom Thracians drove from Abdera (Herodotos i. 168).