Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/192

 184 STRABO. CASAUB. 468. In this she has the assistance of the Curetes who surround the goddess, and by the noise of drums and other similar sounds, by dancing in armour and by tumult, endeavour to strike terror into Saturn, and escape notice whilst removing his child. The child is then delivered into their hands to be brought up with the same care by which he was rescued. The Curetes therefore obtained this appellation, either be- cause they were boys (Kopoi), or because they educated Jupiter in his youth (KovpoTpotyiiv), for there are two explanations, inasmuch as they acted the same part with respect to Jupiter as the Satyri (with respect to Dionysus). Such then is the worship of the Greeks, as far as relates to the celebration of orgies. 12. But the Berecyntes, a tribe of Phrygians, the Phrygi- ans in general, and the Trojans, who live about Mount Ida, themselves also worship Rhea, and perform orgies in her honour ; they call her mother of gods, Agdistis, and Phrygia, * the Great Goddess ; from the places also where she is wor- shipped, Ida3a, and Dindymene, 2 Sipylene, 3 Pessinuntis, 4 and Cybele. 5 The Greeks call her ministers by the same name Curetes, not that they follow the same mythology, but they mean a different kind of persons, a sort of agents analogous to the Satyri. These same ministers are also called by them Corybantes. 13. We have the testimony of the poets in favour of these opinions. Pindar, in the Dithyrambus, which begins in this manner ; " formerly the dithyrambus used to creep upon the ground, long and trailing." After mentioning the hymns, both ancient and modern, in honour of Bacchus, he makes a digression, and says, " for thee, O Mother, resound the large circles of the cymbals, and the ringing crotala; for thee, blaze the torches of the yellow pine ;" where he combines with one another the rites celebrated among the Greeks in honour of Dionysus with those per- formed among the Phrygians in honour of the mother of the 1 This word appears here misplaced; 2 The chain of mountains extending from the sources of the Sagaris (the Zagari) to the Propontis was called Dindymene. 3 Sipuli Dagh. 4 Possene. 5 This name is not derived from any place.