(Ὀνομάκριτος), an Athenian, who occupies tan interesting position in the history of the early Greek religious poetry. Herodotus calls himn χρησμολόγον τε καὶ διαθέτην χρησμῶν τῶν Μουσαίου, and informs us that he had enjoyed the patronage of Hipparchus, until he was detected by Lasus of Herin10uie (the dithyrailbic poet) in masking an interpolation in an
The last of the three passages quoted from Pausanias gives rise to a curious question. Pausanias quotes Hesiod as saying that the Graces were the daughters of Zeus and Eurynome, and that their names were Euphrosyne and Aglaia and Thalia, and then adds that the same account is given in the poems of Onomacritus. Now we find in the fifty-ninth Orphic Hymn the Graces addressed thus : --
Θυγατέρες Ζηνός τε καὶ Εὐνομίης βαθυκόλπου, Ἀγλαἷη τε, Θάλεια, καὶ Εὐφροσύνη πολύολβε.
Some writers have hastily taken this as a proof that the true author of the still extant Orphic hymns was Onoinacritus, or else, as others more cautiously put it, that Onomacritus was one of the authors of them, and that this hymn at least is to be ascribed to him. It proves, if anything, the direct contrary of this; for, had the hymn in question borne the name of Qrpheus in the time of Pausanias, he would have so quoted it, to say nothing of the difference between the name Eurynome in Pausanias and Eunoomia in the hvmn. The truth is that the date of the extant Orphic hymns is centuries later than the time of Onomacritus [ORPHEUS]. That Onomacritus, however, did publish poems under the name of Orpheus, as well as of Musaeus, is probable from several testimonies, among which is that of Aristotle, who held that there never was such a poet as Orpheus, and that the poems known under his name were fabricated partly by Cercops, and partly by Onomacritus. (Cic. de Nat. Deor. 1.38; Philopon. ad Aristot. die Anim. 1.5; Suid. s. v. Ὀρφεύς ; Schol. ad Aristeid. Panath. p. 165; Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hypotyp. 3.4; Euseb. Praep. ELran. 10.4; Tatian. ad v. Graec. 62.)
From these statements it appears that the literary character of Onomacritus must be regarded as quite subordinate to his religious position; that he was not a poet who cultivated the art for its own sake, but a priest, who availed himself of the ancient religious poems for the support of the worship to which he was attached. Of what character that worship was, may be seen from the statement of Pausanias, that "Onomacritus, taking from Homer the name of the Titans, composed (or, established, συνέθηκεν) orgies to Dionysus, and represented in his poems (ὲποίησεν) the Titans as the authors of the sufferings of Dionysus." (Paus. 8.37.4. s. 5.) Here we have, in fact, the great Orphic myth of Dionysus Zagreus, whose worship it thus seems was either established or re-arranged by Onoinacritus, who must therefore be regarded as one of the chief leaders of the Orphic theology, and the Orphic societies. [ORPHEUS.] Some modern writers, as Ulrici, think it probable that Onomacritus was the real author of the Orphic Throyony, to which others again assign a still earlier date. (Grote, History of Greece, vol. i. pp. 25, 29.)
There is an obscure reference in Aristotle (Aristot. Pol. 2.9) to "Onomacritus, a Locrian," the first distinguished legislator, who practised gymnastic exercises in Crete, and travelled abroad on account of the art of divination, and who was a contemporary of Thales. (See Hoeckh, Creta, vol. iii. pp. 318, &c.)
For further remarks on the literary and religious position of Onomacritus, see the Histories of Greek Literature by Muiller, Bernhardy, Ulrici, and Bode ; Müller, Prooem. zu einer Wissenschaftlichen Mythologie ; Lobeck, Aglaophnamus, and Ritschl, in Ersch and Gruber's Encyklopadiie.
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