Seized by the Nymph?: Onesagoras the ‘dekatephoros’ in the Nymphaeum at Kafizin in Cyprus

While dedicatory practices have been a subject of frequent studies by historians of Greek religion, existing scholarship has paid little or no attention to an important dossier of inscriptions from Cyprus: on the conical hill of Kafizin is a cave-sanctuary where some 310 inscribed items of pottery h...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Kernos
Main Author: Jim, Theodora Suk Fong (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
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Published: Centre [2012]
In: Kernos
Online Access: Volltext (doi)
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Summary:While dedicatory practices have been a subject of frequent studies by historians of Greek religion, existing scholarship has paid little or no attention to an important dossier of inscriptions from Cyprus: on the conical hill of Kafizin is a cave-sanctuary where some 310 inscribed items of pottery have been excavated, the vast majority of which were inscribed with the name Onesagoras, son of Philounios, and were dedicated to a Nymph between 225 and 218 B.C. Onesagoras displayed such an intensity in his worship of the Nymph that he may be thought of as a nympholept or as being possessed by the Nymph. The dossier makes available important material for the study of religious practices at the sub-polis level. This article aims to bring this material to the attention of students and scholars of Greek religion and to raise questions concerning dedicatory practices.
Contains:Enthalten in: Kernos
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.4000/kernos.2101