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Headword: *koru/bantes
Adler number: kappa,2114
Translated headword: Korybants
Vetting Status: high
Translation:
Some take it that the Kouretes and the Korybantes are the same. They were Zeus' nurses and guards. Some say they [were] ten, others nine. They were the children of Rhea.[1]
And a Korybant [was] the same as the Kouretes, who were the nurses of Zeus and his teachers, and attendants of Rhea.[2]
Greek Original:
*koru/bantes: e)/nioi tou\s *kou/rhtas kai\ tou\s *koru/bantas tou\s au)tou\s u(peilh/fasin. h)=san de\ *dio\s trofei=s ou(=toi kai\ fu/lakes. tine\s de\ au)tou\s de/ka fasi/n, a)/lloi e)nne/a. h)=san de\ th=s *(re/as pai=des. kai\ *koru/bas o( au)to\s toi=s *kou/rhsin, oi(\ h)=san trofei=s tou= *dio\s kai\ dida/skaloi kai\ th=s *(re/as o)padoi/.
Notes:
See also kappa 2115, kappa 2116.
[1] From the scholia to Aristophanes, Lysistrata 558; cf. those to Wasps 9.
[2] This passage (nearly identical to the preceding) comes from the scholia to Plato, Symposium 215E.
The Kouretes and Korybantes are routinely conflated as ecstatic male confraternities (web address 1), as discussed in Strabo 10.3.19-22.
Associated internet address:
Web address 1
Keywords: comedy; definition; mythology; philosophy; religion
Translated by: Nick Nicholas on 2 February 2009@08:17:56.
Vetted by:
Catharine Roth (cosmetics, keywords, status) on 2 February 2009@16:26:20.
David Whitehead (x-refs; tweaks and cosmetics) on 3 February 2009@03:49:39.
David Whitehead on 13 March 2013@06:40:28.

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