Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/195

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B. x. c. in. 17. THE CURETES. 187 among the Thracians, resemble these. The Orphic ceremonies had their origin among these people. .^Eschylus mentions the goddess Cotys, and the instruments used in her worship among the Edoni. 1 For after saying, " O divine Cotys, goddess of the Edoni, With the instruments of the mountain worship j" immediately introduces the followers of Dionysus, " one holding the bombyces, the admirable work of the turner, with the fingers makes the loud notes resound, exciting frenzy ; another makes the brass-bound cotylse to re-echo." And in another passage ; " The song of victory is poured forth ; invisible mimes low and bellow from time to time like bulls, inspiring fear, and the echo of the drum rolls along like the noise of subterranean thunder ; " 2 for these are like the Phrygian ceremonies, nor is it at all improbable that, as the Phrygians themselves are a colony of Thracians, so they brought from Thrace their sacred ceremo- nies, and by joining together Dionysus and the Edonian Lycurgus they intimate a similarity in the mode of the wor- ship of both. 17. From the song, the rhythm, and the instruments, all Thracian music is supposed to be Asiatic. This is evident also from the places where the Muses are held in honour. For Pieria, Olympus, Pimpla, and Leibethrum were anciently places, and mountains, belonging to the Thracians, but at present they are in the possession of the Macedonians. The Thracians, who were settled in Boeotia, dedicated Helicon to the Muses, and consecrated the cave of the Nymphs, Leibe- thriades. The cultivators of ancient music are said to have been Thracians, as Orpheus, Musasus, Thamyris; hence also Eumolpus had his name. Those who regard the whole of Asia as far as India as consecrated to Bacchus, refer to that country as the origin of a great portion of the present music. One author speaks of " striking forcibly the Asiatic cithara : " another calls the pipes Berecynthian and Phry- 1 Athenaeus, b. xi. c. 8. ^Eschylus in the Edoni (a fragment) calls cymbals cotylae. " 2 Probably from a passage in the Erectheus, a lost play of Euripides.