Olympic Victor Monuments and Greek Athletic Art by Walter Woodburn Hyde
248. Krison is mentioned by Plato, _Protag._, 335 E, and _de Leg._,
994 words | Chapter 206
VIII, 840 A; Aristophanes of Byzantion (_apud_ Zonaras, I, p. 451, and
_apud_ Hesych., _s. v._ Γρίσων); Plut., _de adul. et amici Discr._, 16;
and _de Tranqu. anim._, 12; etc.
[1457] _Inschr. v. Ol._, 157. He won Ol. (?) 80 (= 460 B. C.): P. VI,
8.1; Hyde, 71; Foerster, 280.
[1458] B. B., no. 321; Bulle, 164, and fig. 93 on pp. 361-2 (cast
on round base in Erlangen); von Mach 72; Collignon, I, p. 417, fig.
215; Rayet, I, Pl. 35; Helbig, _Fuehrer_, I, 956; _Guide_, 617;
Zielinski, _Rhein. Mus._, XXXIX, 1884, pp. 116 f. (who refers the
original possibly to Strongylion); F. W., 215. For replicas, see _Gaz.
Arch._, 1881, p. 130; Rayet, text to Pl. 35; and Furtwaengler, _Der
Dornauszieher und der Knabe mit der Gans_, 1876, pp. 7 f; Reinach,
_Rép._, 1, 344, 6. It was called a runner first by Visconti, _Opere
varie_, 1827-31, IV, Pl. XXIII, pp. 163 f., who has been followed by
Collignon, Zielinski, Rayet, Reisch (p. 46), Richardson (p. 144), and
others. It is 0.80 meter high (Bulle).
[1459] _E. g._, Overbeck, II, pp. 182-185, and notes 10-24 on p. 186.
On p. 183, fig. 186, he gives illustrations of the three principal
copies—the marble one in the British Museum (a), the bronze statuette
in Baron Rothschild’s collection in Paris (b), and the Capitoline
bronze in Rome (c). He brings it into relation with the sculptor
Boëthos, who is known to have made seated _genre_ figures of boys, _e.
g._, one in the Heraion at Olympia, P., V., 17. 4 (= S. Q., 1596).
[1460] Von Mach, no. 86; _cf._ Kekulé, _A. Z._, XLI, 1883, p. 244, and
F. W., 215.
[1461] See _B. M. Sculpt._, III, pp. 109-110.
[1462] See K. Woelke, Dornauszieher-Maedchen, _Jb._, XXIX, 1914, pp.
17-25, figs. 1, 2, etc.
[1463] _E. g._, bronze statuettes, formerly in the Dreyfus collection
in Paris, dating from the second half of the fifteenth century: Bulle,
p. 364, fig. 94; _Mon. Piot_, XVI, 1909, Pl. XII, 3 (nos. 2, 3 =
Italian bronzes of the same subject in the Louvre and in the collection
of Charles Haviland; see text, by G. Migeon, pp. 95 f.).
[1464] _B. M. Sculpt._, III, no. 1755 and Pl. VIII; _Mon. d. I._, X,
1874-78, Pl. XXX; _Annali_, XLVIII, 1876, Pl. N (and pp. 124 f); _A.
Z._, XXXV, 1877, p. 127, and XXXVII, 1879, p. 19, Pls. II, III; Rayet,
Pl. 36; von Mach, 284; Bulle, p. 365, fig. 95; Reinach, _Rép._, II, 1,
144, 2. It is 0.63 meter high (Bulle).
[1465] _Gaz. arch._, 1881, Pls. IX-XI; Collignon, I, p. 420, fig. 216;
Rayet, text to no. 36; Reinach, _Rép._, II, 1, 143, 7. It is 9.5 inches
tall.
[1466] See Lange, _Das Motif des aufgestuetzten Fusses_, 1879, pp. 9
f.; Reisch, p. 46, n. 5; B. B., no. 67 (Paris copy); von Mach, 238a
(Munich copy), 238b (Louvre copy). See _supra_, pp. 86-87.
[1467] See E. N. Gardiner, _J. H. S._, XXIII, 1903, p. 281; on the
race, see Gardiner, pp. 285-91, and _J. H. S._, _l. c._, pp. 280 f.;
Krause, I, pp. 353-359; Dar.-Sagl., I, Pt. 2, p. 1644; etc.
[1468] At Olympia, P., III, 14.3; Plut., _Quaest. conviv._, II, 5;
Artemidoros, _Oneirokritika_, I, 63; Heliod., _Aethiop._, IV., _init._;
_Oxy. Pap._; at Delphi, Krause, _Die Pythien, Nemeen, und Isthmien_,
1841, p. 26, no. 4; at the _Panathenaia_, Mommsen, _Feste d. Stadt
Athen_, 1898, p. 70. On its origin, see Ph., 7.
[1469] P., II, 11.8; X, 34.5. In the first passage Pausanias speaks
of a victor who won the _diaulos_ twice—once γυμνός, the second time
σὺν τῇ ἀσπίδι. De Ridder, _B. C. H._, XXI, 1897, pp. 211 f., discusses
Hauser’s futile argument (_Jb._, II, 1887, pp. 95 f.) that the
hoplite-runner covered the stadion four times, the first and fourth
with helmet and shield, the second and third without the shield, and
conclusively shows that the race was a _diaulos_. For Athens, see
Aristoph., _Aves_, 291 f., and scholion. The race was four stades long
at Nemea: _cf._ Ph., 7, and Juethner’s note (p. 196).
[1470] Ph., 8; _cf._ also 24.
[1471] VI, 10.4. In V, 12.8 he says that 25 shields for this race were
officially kept in the nave of the temple of Zeus.
[1472] We see shield, helmet, and greaves on the vase pictured in
Dar.-Sagl., I, 2, p. 1644, fig. 2231; Baum., III, p. 2110, fig. 2360;
on the b.-f. vases in Gerhard, IV, Pls. CCLVII, CCLVIII, and CCLXIII;
on the b.-f. vases pictured in Schreiber, _Bilderatlas_, Pl. XXII,
figs. 3 (sixth century B. C., = Gerhard, IV, Pl. CCLVIII) and 5 (=
amphora in the British Museum: _B. M. Vases_, II, B 608); we see no
greaves on the r.-f. kylix in Berlin (Fig. 41); _cf._ Krause, pp. 354 f.
[1473] _Jb._, II, 1887, pp. 95 f.; X, 1895, pp. 199 f.
[1474] P., VI, 10.4.
[1475] P., X, 34.5. Mnesiboulos won stade- and hoplite-races at Olympia
in Ol. 235 (= 161 A. D.): Afr.; Foerster, 712-713; _cf._ Hitz.-Bluemn.,
II, 2, p. 582. He was also περιοδονίκης in both events.
[1476] _E. g._, by Ph., 7.
[1477] A bronze helmet found at Olympia, recently in the possession of
the Bishop of Lincoln, is pictured in _J. H. S._, II, 1881, Pl. XI, 1.
[1478] _E. g._, on the vase in Dar.-Sagl., I, 2, p. 1644, fig. 2231; on
the Panathenaic vase in the British Museum, already mentioned, dating
from the second half of the fourth century B. C.: _B. M. Vases_, II,
B. 608; = Gardiner, p. 290, fig. 58; = _Mon. d. I._, X, 1874-78, Pl.
XLVIII, e, 3; = Baum, III, p. 2110, fig. 2361; here the runners are
running with the feet flat on the ground.
[1479] In the Cabinet des Médailles of the Bibliothèque Nationale, no.
523; Hartwig, _Die griech. Meisterschalen_, 1893, pp. 132-142, Pls. XV,
2 and XVI; Gardiner, p. 286, fig. 54, and _J.
Reading Tips
Use arrow keys to navigate
Press 'N' for next chapter
Press 'P' for previous chapter