Dontas(Δόντας), a Lacedaemonian
statuary, was the disciple of Dipoenus and Scyllis, and therefore flourished about B. C. 550. He made the statues which were afterwards placed in the
treasury of the Megarians at Olympia. They were of cedar inlaid with gold, and formed a group
representing the contest of Heracles with the river Acheloüs, and containing figures of
Zeus, Deianeira, Acheloüs, and Heracles, with Ares assisting Acheloüs, and Athena
supporting Heracles. The latter statue seems, however, not to have been part of the original
group, but a separate work by Medon. (Comp. Paus. 5.17. 1.) The
group in the pediment of the Megarian treasury, representing the war of the gods and the
giants, seems also to have been the work of Dontas; but the passage in Pausanias is not quite
clear. (Paus. 6.19.9; Böckh, Corp.
Inscrip. i. p. 47, &c.)
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