The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов

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eds. 1997. Inscriptions d’Épidamne‐Dyrrhachion et d’Apollonia, 2A: Inscriptions d’Apollonia d’Illyrie. Athens: n.p.

      2 Hammond, N. G. L. 1967. Epirus. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

      IACP no. 77 (328–29).

      CHRISTOPHER BARON

       University of Notre Dame

      Patronymic, father of BISALTES (of ABYDOS). Histiaeus leaves control of affairs in the HELLESPONT region to Bisaltes near the end of the IONIAN REVOLT, c. 494 BCE (6.26.1). The name Apollophanes was extremely common in ancient Greece; nothing more is known of this man.

      SEE ALSO: Apollo; Histiaeus son of Lysagoras

      FURTHER READING

      LGPN V.A, 45–46 s.v. Ἀπολλοϕάνης.

      ANTHONY ELLIS

       University of Bern

      Reports of divine apparitions are not confined to the chronological or geographical fringes of the Histories—they occur most often on Greek soil, to Greek witnesses, and in the context of the PERSIAN WARS (epiphanies during battle are particularly common in the Greek world; cf. Pritchett 1979, 11–46). Herodotus records two stories of epiphanies during or after the Battle of Marathon: Pan’s appearance to PHILIPPIDES (6.105; Paus. 8.54.6) and the large HOPLITE who kills a Greek soldier and blinds Epizelus (6.117.2–3; retold with differences at Plut. Mor. 305c). He also transmits three reports of apparitions connected with XERXES’ campaign: the tall and handsome divine figure who (several times) appears in the DREAMS of Xerxes and ARTABANUS (7.12–18), the defense of DELPHI by two large figures identified by the Delphians as the heroes PHYLACUS (2) and (8.37–39), and a female apparition who, on one account, rebukes the Greeks for their cowardice at the beginning of the Battle of SALAMIS (8.84). Other manifestations of divine presence during Xerxes’ campaign include the dust cloud and Bacchic cry witnessed by DEMARATUS and DICAEUS during the Persian occupation of Attica (8.65; cf. Plut. Them. 15.1–2), and the mysterious boat of men which, on the Athenian account, reproached ADEIMANTUS and the Corinthians at Salamis (8.94).

      While such events are clearly remarkable, they were perhaps not wholly unexpected by the combatants and in some cases may have been actively sought: before Salamis, Herodotus reports, the Greeks sent a ship to fetch AEACUS and his offspring from AEGINA (8.64; cf. 8.121). Nor are all divine apparitions one‐off events. Various traditions present the appearance of gods as recurring: the Egyptians of Chemmis say that Perseus often appears to them (2.91.3–5), Apis is believed to appear to the Egyptians periodically as a calf (2.153; 3.27), and finally Zeus BELUS and Theban ZEUS are claimed to sleep with mortal women in their TEMPLES, one of the few types of divine epiphany of which Herodotus expresses disbelief (1.182). A smaller number of “one‐off” epiphanies predate the Persian Wars: Herodotus describes two apparitions connected with the Spartan king ARISTON’s wife (which must be dated in the early‐ and mid‐sixth century: 6.61.3–5, 69.1–4), and the dream‐figure which appears to Hipparchus and predicts his DEATH in riddling hexameters (5.56, in 514 BCE). The εἴδωλον of the dead MELISSA, appearing to PERIANDER’s MESSENGERS, instructs her former husband to burn clothes to keep her warm (5.92.η.2 and 4). Finally, the Histories also recounts an epiphany set in the mythical past: TRITON’s appearance to JASON in LIBYA (4.179.2–3).

      In Greek PROSE narratives, the appearance of gods and HEROES is most often associated with crisis situations (battles, illnesses, etc.) and with explanations for the origins of new cults and RITUALS. Many of Herodotus’ apparitions fall within these categories. The appearance of Pan caused the Athenians to establish a cult to him (6.105), and the appearance of Triton is associated with a lost cult object hidden by the Libyans (4.179.3; cf. the sanctuary built to BOREAS after he responded to Athenian PRAYERS and destroyed much of the Persian fleet, 7.189).

      It is striking that, of the many reports of divine or heroic apparitions to waking witnesses, Herodotus is always careful to identify his SOURCES and never explicitly endorses them in his own voice. An apparition must, of course, be seen or recognized by someone, and any witnesses are thus an integral part of the story. Since the narrative comes at second hand, attention to sources is to be expected, especially given the possibility of staged epiphanies (cf. Xen. Hell. 6.4.7). Nevertheless, the fact that Herodotus never states his belief in an anthropomorphic appearance of heroes or gods has struck some as a sign of skepticism, compounded by the fact that the testimony for many episodes is in various ways tenuous, either because they rely on a single source (5.92; 6.105, 117.2–3; 6.61.3–5, 69.1–4), because they are one of several competing accounts (the woman at Salamis, 8.84), or because they are part of a story that is, on other grounds, suspect (8.94; see Graf 2004, 115–18). Further support for this view might be sought in Herodotus’ (approving?) report of the Persian view that the Greeks are foolish for thinking the gods to have human forms (1.131.1). Any skepticism, however, must be inferred from equivocal evidence. When Herodotus describes an apparition using the word θῶμα (“wonder”) and related terms, it is sometimes unclear whether he is describing his astonishment at something he accepts is miraculous or his skepticism at something he thinks implausible

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