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In the second book of the Histories, Herodotus recounts a legend that attributes the establishment of the oracle of Dodona to Egypt’s influence: a more fantastical variant of the tale features a black dove capable of human speech, while a more realistic rendition identifies an abducted Egyptian priestess as the founder. Notably absent from Herodotus’ account are the Selloi, a group of ascetic diviners mentioned in the Iliad’s brief depiction of Dodona, where they are said to sleep on the ground and refrain from washing their feet, presumably to maintain a spiritual connection to earth. This absence of the ancient priesthood from the Histories led some scholars to conclude that the Selloi must have disappeared by the time of Herodotus, fully replaced by a college of priestesses said to derive their sacred knowledge from the Egyptian Thebes. This point of view was challenged lately, as more evidence for the continued presence of male priests in Dodona had been uncovered and cataloged. Hence it seems consequent to suppose that the exclusion of the Selloi from the Histories may have been entirely intentional on Herodotus’ part, since the existence of this college and its acknowledgement in the Iliad could be difficult to reconcile with a theory proposed in the second book, which suggests that Dodona had a foundational role in the early development of the Greek religion as a conductor of the Egyptian influence in the pre-Homeric Greece

Ключевые фразы: dodona, herodotus, selloi, peleiades, greece, egypt, oracles
Автор (ы): Исаенко Роман Андреевич
Журнал: PHILOLOGIA CLASSICA

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Идентификаторы и классификаторы

SCI
Литература
УДК
821.14. Греческая литература
Для цитирования:
ИСАЕНКО Р. А. HDT. 2, 50-57: THE LEGEND OF THE DOVES AND THE ABSENCE OF THE SELLOI // PHILOLOGIA CLASSICA. 2025. Т. 20 № 1
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