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with the ERYTHRAEAN SEA (i.e., the sea to the south and east of Africa and ASIA) but carefully avoids bringing in the notion of a surrounding OCEAN (Nesselrath 2005, 155).

      SEE ALSO: Atlantes; Atlas River; Geography; Libya

      REFERENCES

      1 Nesselrath, Heinz‐Günther. 2005. “‘Where the Lord of the Sea Grants Passage to Sailors Through the Deep‐Blue Mere No More’: The Greeks and the Western Seas.” G&R 52: 153–71.

      2 Nesselrath, Heinz‐Günther. 2006. Platon, Kritias: Übersetzung und Kommentar. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

      ATLAS MOUNTAIN, see ATLANTES

      ATLAS RIVER (ὁ Ἄτλας ποταμός)

      CHRISTOPHER BARON

       University of Notre Dame

      River in northern THRACE, tributary of the ISTER (Danube), flowing north from Mt. HAEMUS along with the AURAS and TIBISIS (4.49.1). The exact location and identification of this Atlas are unknown, though the name is thought to be Thracian.

      SEE ALSO: Atlantes; Rivers

      FURTHER READING

      1 Corcella in ALC, 618.

      2 Duridanov, Ivan. 1985. Die Sprache der Thraker, 23–24. Neuried: Hieronymus.

      ROBERT ROLLINGER

       University of Innsbruck

      As wife of DARIUS I, daughter of CYRUS (II), and mother of XERXES, Atossa was a powerful female agent at the Persian court. Herodotus elaborates a Greek tradition found in AESCHYLUS’ Persians, where she was already a prominent figure (Brosius 1996, 8, 16–17, 48–51, 106–9). However, although activities of royal women are well‐attested in the PERSEPOLIS Fortification and Treasury Archives, Atossa is only mentioned twice in these texts, if at all (Ú‐du‐sa‐na in PF 0162, 0163, according to Henkelman 2010, 703 with n. 136; Tavernier 2007, 212 ad 4.2.835; Schmitt, IPGL 147 (no. 105), is skeptical).

      According to Herodotus she was previously married to her brother CAMBYSES (II) (3.88.2) and became part of SMERDIS’ court (3.68.3–5). When Darius ascended to the throne, he immediately married Atossa and ARTYSTONE, another daughter of Cyrus (3.88.2), although the conspirators had previously agreed only to marry wives of their households (3.84.2). Thus Herodotus combines Darius’ striving for legitimacy with the king’s striking penchant for manipulation and dishonesty (Rollinger 2018). Darius and Atossa have four sons: Xerxes (7.2.2–3), HYSTAPES (7.64.2), MASISTES (7.82), and ACHAEMENES (7.97).

      SEE ALSO: Causation; Medicine; Monarchy; Orientalism; Persia; Persica; Women in the Histories

      REFERENCES

      1 Bichler, Reinhold. 2000. Herodots Welt: Der Aufbau der Historie am Bild der fremden Länder und Völker, ihrer Zivilisation und ihrer Geschichte. Berlin: Akademie‐Verlag.

      2 Brosius, Maria. 1996. Women in Ancient Persia, 559–331 BC. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

      3 Griffiths, Alan. 1987. “Democedes of Croton: A Greek Doctor at the Court of Darius.” In Achaemenid History II: The Greek Sources, edited by Heleen Sancisi‐Weerdenburg and Amélie Kuhrt, 37–51. Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten.

      4 Henkelman, Wouter. 2010. “‘Consumed Before the King’: The Table of Darius, That of Irdabama and Irtašuna, and That of his Satarap Karkiš.” In Der Achämenidenhof—The Achaemenid Court, edited by Bruno Jacobs and Robert Rollinger, 667–775. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.

      5 Rollinger, Robert. 2018. “Herodotus and the Transformation of Ancient Near Eastern Motifs: Darius I, Oebares, and the Neighing Horse.” In Interpreting Herodotus, edited by Thomas Harrison and Elizabeth Irwin, 125–48. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      6 Tavernier, Jan. 2007. Iranica in the Achaemenid Period (ca. 550–330 B.C.): Lexicon of Old Iranian Proper Names and Loanwords, Attested in Non‐Iranian Texts. Leuven: Peeters.

      FURTHER READING

      1 Sancisi‐Weerdenburg, Heleen. 1983. “Exit Atossa: Images of Women in Greek Historiography on Persia.” In Images of Women in Antiquity, edited by Averil Cameron and Amélie Kuhrt, 20–33. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. Reprinted with addendum in ORCS Vol. 2, 135–50.

      CHRISTOPHER BARON

       University of Notre Dame

      Collective name for AGAMEMNON and MENELAUS, the sons of ATREUS, mythical king of MYCENAE. Herodotus mentions the brothers’ expedition to TROY (to recover Helen) as one of the massive expeditions in Greek history (“according to the story,” kata ta legomena), only to say that their force in no way compared to that of XERXES in size (7.20.2). He thus impresses his reader with the sheer scale of Xerxes’ endeavor (Shimron 1973, 46–47).

      SEE ALSO: Historical Method; Myth; Trojan War

      REFERENCE

      1 Shimron, B. 1973. “Πρῶτος τῶν ἡμεῖς ἴδμεν.” Eranos 71: 45–51.

      CHRISTOPHER BARON

       University of Notre Dame