Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T21:25:58.999Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Θρᾷξ, Δυτȋνος, Καταρράκτης

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

J. K. Anderson
Affiliation:
University of California

Extract

During the course of four months' work with oil-damaged sea-birds at the Richmond Bird Rescue Centre in California, I made notes which may help to establish meanings for the following names, which are left doubtful in D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson's Glossary of Greek Birds.

Θρφξ. Mentioned only in Dionysius, Ixeuticon ii 14, iii 25, where it is coupled with the κόλυμβος as a bird that sleeps upon the water. Κόλυμβος or κολυμβίς is almost certainly the Little Grebe, being described by Alexander of Myndus (ap. Athen, ix 315d) as ‘smallest of all the water birds’, and θρᾷξ should also be a grebe. As the grebes treated at Richmond recovered their health, there was abundant opportunity to observe the bird's preference for sleeping on the water, and it was in fact accepted as a rule that birds should spend two days and nights continuously on the water in an outdoor artificial pool before being released in the sea. These were Western Grebes (Aechmophorus occidentalis), a species unknown in the eastern hemisphere. For θρᾷξ I would suggest the Great Crested Grebe (Podiceps cristatus cristatus), which is certainly known in Thracian waters—‘nowhere so numerous as in the harbour of Istanbul’ in March. But I would suggest that its name (or nickname—οἱ καλουμένοι θρᾷκες: Dionysius loc. cit.) comes rather from its crest, comparable to that of the fox-skin cap and helmet nowadays called Thracian. In a writer of the Roman Imperial period there may also be some reference to ‘Thracian’ gladiators. Western Grebes are very pugnacious birds, until one has gained their confidence, and Great Crested Grebes may share this characteristic.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1972

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Thompson, op. cit. 90–1.

2 David, A. and Bannerman, W. Mary, Birds of Cyprus (Edinburgh, 1958) 276Google Scholar. Cf. also Reiser, O., Materialien zu einer Ornis Balcanica iii (Griechenland) (Wien, 1905) 552–3Google Scholar.

3 Schröder, Bruno, ‘Thrakische Helme’, JdI xxvii (1912) 317–44Google Scholar; Snodgrass, A., Arms and Armour of the Greeks 95Google Scholar.

4 Op. cit. 74–5.

5 Pitt, Francis, Birds in Britain (London, 1948) 493Google Scholar.

6 Thompson, op. cit. 75, properly rejects the suggestion that Dionysius's description refers to the Gannet or Solan Goose, and notes suggestions (to which I have nothing to add) on the identity of Aristotle's bird.

7 Benton, S., ‘Nereids and two Attic Pyxides’, JHS xc (1970) 193CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

8 Pliny, NH x 74.145.

9 Vergil, , Aeneid ix 588Google Scholar; Aristotle, , De Caelo ii 7.289A.Google ScholarGuthrie, W. K. C., in the Loeb Aristotle: on the Heavens (Harvard, 1953Google Scholar) cites numerous other Latin texts, but adds that he can find no Greek authors who mention this belief, apart from Aristotle. The ‘origin of a belief so patently at variance with the facts’ is no doubt the fact that leaden bullets (sling or rifle) picked up immediately after impact, are hot because their kinetic energy is converted into heat.