[826]. Op. cit. II. p. 141.

[827]. Op. cit. II. pp. 160, 392, 393, and article in P.S.B.A. quoted in n. 2, p. [237] supra.

[828]. Plutarch, de Is. et Os. c. XLVI. Cf. Origen, adv. Cels. Bk I. c. 60.

[829]. Herodotus, Bk VII. c. 114.

[830]. Clem. Alex. Strom. Bk V. c. 11, says Zeus is the same as Hades. He quotes Euripides as authority for the statement, but I do not know the play in which it appears. He also, op. cit. Bk V. c. 14, quotes Xenocrates as saying that there is an “Upper and Lower” Zeus.

[831]. Heracles, of course, applied compulsion to Hades. For the magic compulsion of the same power, see the Magic Papyrus of the Bibl. Nat. in Wessely’s Griech. Zauberpap. p. 38.

[832]. P.S.B.A. 1912, p. 137, for authorities.

[833]. Jean Reville, La Religion à Rome sous les Sevères, Paris, 1886, p. 30.

[834]. Cumont, T. et M. II. p. 91, no. 2; p. 99, nos. 30, 34; p. 102, no. 49; p. 103, no. 53.

[835]. Op. cit. II. p. 99, no. 29.