by
Damien F. Mackey
“One wonders indeed what Gildas Hamel may have come up
with if he had only known,
or could even have imagined the possibility, that the
story of Jonah was the original”.
John R. Salverda
John R. Salverda has had much success in showing that a
good deal of fantastic ancient mythology - especially the Greco-Roman (but also
other ones) - derives from biblical tales.
And I fully concur with his view that the tale of Jonah,
that is reflected in many parts of the Jason myth - as Gildas Hamel has so clearly
demonstrated (see below) - “was the original”.
Why would one suggest otherwise - that a tale such as
Jason’s, featuring such fantastic elements as “clashing rocks” and “harpies”
and the goddess “Athena”, would be the model for the story of a prophet who had
witnessed to an historically-attested king, Jeroboam II of Israel?:
“From the limited
information given in the Bible,
it seems that Jeroboam II was a gifted commander and an able organizer
who succeeded in elevating the kingdom of Israel to a last climax before its
fall. In the tradition of the Judahite redactors of the northern sources
preserved in the Bible, Jeroboam is adjudged a king who "departed not from
all the sins that Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, made Israel to sin" (II Kings 14:24).
However, his loyalty to YHWH can be deduced
not only from the name of his son Zechariah (Heb. "Remembered by YHWH") but also
from the prophecies of "the prophet Jonah
son of Amittai of Gath-Hepher" (ibid., 14:25), who encouraged
Jeroboam in his wars and prophesied his victory. It is unfortunate that these
prophecies are not preserved. A stamp seal depicting a lion and reading lšm
ʿ ʿ bd yrb ʿ m, "Property of Shema, servant of
Jeroboam," was found at Megiddo (Cogan and Tadmor, pl. 12a)”.
John Salverda wrote to me on the subject:
Dear Damien,
I have recently come across a very
interesting article written about 17 years ago by one, Gildas Hamel: "Taking
the Argo to Nineveh:" Jonah and Jason in a Mediterranean Context.
http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?sid=646e5a34-df65-4eef-9502-f8a98a33f4b1%40sessionmgr13&vid=1&hid=15&bdata=JmF1dGh0eXBlPWdlbyZnZW9jdXN0aWQ9czM2MTM5MDQmc2l0ZT1laG9zdC1saXZl#db=
http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?sid=646e5a34-df65-4eef-9502-f8a98a33f4b1%40sessionmgr13&vid=1&hid=15&bdata=JmF1dGh0eXBlPWdlbyZnZW9jdXN0aWQ9czM2MTM5MDQmc2l0ZT1laG9zdC1saXZl#db=
f5h&AN=9510053388
(This website will read the article to you if you like, it takes a while to do so and you may read it for yourself faster.)
(This website will read the article to you if you like, it takes a while to do so and you may read it for yourself faster.)
I feel certain that you will be well rewarded if you can find the time to check it out.
Hamel is of course handicapped by the fact that, in accordance with conventional chronology, he assumes the Greek myth of Jason to be much older than the Scriptural book of Jonah. Never-the-less his insight into the cultural connections between the Greeks and the nation of Israel are remarkable. He supposes that the Book of Jonah is somehow a parody of the Argonautica, the Hebrew author borrowing names, words, and motifs, from the Greek tale that, he feels, sailors out of the port of Joppa must have been familiar with.
I can't help but feel that much of the
difficulties that he has relating the two stories comes from assuming that the
Greek tale is the original. He mentions parenthetically that, "there is an
Edenic quality to the wood where the latter finds the Golden Fleece," and
he further notes, "the fleece of a ram which was sacrificed after saving
Phrixus, in a story reminiscent of the Akedah in Genesis 22." In neither
case does he help us to understand how the "ancient" tale of the
Argonauts could have borrowed those motifs from the Scriptures of a nation of
Israel that he supposes did not exist yet for another couple hundred years.
Of course there is also incorporated
into the story of Jason references to the tale of Noah, not only in the name of
the "Argo" and in the mention of Doves (which Hamel explains away as
"birds used in very ancient sailing practice to guide lost sailors to
land"), but also in the very geography of the story. The destination of
the Argo is in association with the destination of the Ark as Colchis is
contiguous with Ararat. Neither does he attempt to explain the mysterious
"Minyan" people, who also originate within the realm of Ararat
(Urartu).
The story of the Exodus is also
alluded to within the body of the ancient versions of the Argonautica; the
ghost of Phrixus calling out to be returned and buried in his homeland, as the
bones of Joseph; The "Midian" wife of Moses as "Medea" (the
Ethiop Andro-"meda," of Perseus, and Hesione of Heracles); Phinehas,
who served before the Ark of God with it's "cherubs," and the Kosher laws,
as Phineus whose "Harpies" befouled his food.
These not withstanding, Hamel has much
to contribute to our understanding of the connections between Jonah and Jason.
His explanations of the words "Boreas," and "kikayon" (the
gourd), are noteworthy even though the direction of the borrowing is not
convincing. His equation of the iconography of the naked Jason with the naked
Jonah, his noting of the conversion of the respective crews, and his insistence
of the similarities between Jason, Jonah, and Jesus (thus their Messianic
attributes), and much more, show an amazing grasp of the puzzle.
One wonders indeed what he may have
come up with if he had only known, or could even have imagined the possibility,
that the story of Jonah was the original.
--
-John R. Salverda
From: http://humweb.ucsc.edu/gweltaz/courses/prophets/commentaries/Jonah/jonah.html
From: http://humweb.ucsc.edu/gweltaz/courses/prophets/commentaries/Jonah/jonah.html
Taking the Argo to Nineveh: Jonah and Jason in a Mediterranean Context
Gildas Hamel (notes at end of paper)
Naturally, the book of Jonah must be read, first and
last, within its Hebrew context. Indeed, the text reverberates, especially to
Hebrew ears, with clear echoes of biblical passages that come from the Noah
story, from Jeremiah, Joel, and other prophets.**1** In numerous studies,
commentators have pointed out these intertextual links, while disagreeing on
the exact nature of their reemployment. They wonder if the author is being
ironic, satirical, parodic, allegorical, or didactic.**2** Still, the story of
Jonah also reads like a maritime tale whose meaning might be enriched and its
themes emerge in bolder relief, were it set against its Mediterranean
background, especially Greek lore. Wedged between the empires of Mesopotamia
and Egypt, ancient Israel was also a Mediterranean country, in contact by sea
from the earliest times with Greek civilization, among other maritime powers.
While the cultural significance of this proximity has been recognized by some
XIXth and early XXth century scholars, the use of the comparative method often
has been too sweeping and led at times to reductive and unhelpful results.
In recent times, relatively little attention has been
paid to the connections that the Jonah story may have to Greek tales, apart
from a few notable recent and not so recent exceptions; elements of the legend
of Heracles and the story of Perseus and Andromeda, for instance, are
strikingly similar, as Cyril of Alexandria and Jerome had already noted.**3**
In the end, though, these parallels have failed to impress most exegetes, who
have concluded that they are not helpful in the interpretation of the book.
Yet, an interesting and hitherto little explored
possibility is that the book of Jonah presents puzzling parallels with Jason
and elements of the Argonauts' story. The parallel between Jason and Jonah, not
mentioned by early Jewish or Christian writers, has been evoked by a few
classicists at the beginning of this century, because of an unusual representation
of Jason found in 1833 in Caere (Cerveteri). Their comments are very brief,
however, usually framed within a very broad comparative format, and without
seeing and developing any analysis of the details that show the extent of
cultural interaction.**4** Furthermore, the possible connection between the two
stories seems to have been long since forgotten and has not drawn any attention
from commentators of the text in the past sixty years.**5**
What I propose herein is to reexamine the parallels between
Jonah and Jason. In particular, I hope to show how the author of Jonah plays
with one of the variants of the story of Jason, or that Jonah's story, at the
very least, can be placed within the nebula of variants of Jason's tale. The
saga of the Argonauts seems to have been widespread in oral, written, and
pictural forms, while numerous representations of various elements of their
story, conveniently gathered now in the Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae
Classicae,**6** are sufficient proof of its diffusion around the
Mediterranean. Many stories attached to Jason as a kind of patron of navigators
circulated widely. The differences to be found in the written versions of
Pindar (518-438 BCE), Euripides (ca. 485-ca. 406 BCE), Apollonius of Rhodes
(third century BCE), Valerius Flaccus (flourished in the first c. BCE), and the
so-called Orphic Argonautica, attest to the fluidity of a multi-faceted
tradition which one imagines to have also been a living, ever-changing, oral
tradition. One may suppose that from an early date, written, oral, and
iconographic versions influenced each other in multiple ways.
My thesis, therefore, is that the author of the Jonah
tale used bits of this widely circulating oral cycle within the framework of
his own Hebrew tradition. His is a highly literate story, the work of a writer
who used chiastic structures, repeats, puns, and ironic twists. In their
re-employment in the Hebrew story, the elements of the tale of the Argonauts
appear only as vestiges, although I think they are more significant than has
been granted until now.**7** At a minimum, their selection and the way in which
they are recast suggest an anti-polytheistic attitude turned against Ionians,
as well as against the more obvious Ninevites. Many more elements are at work than
were previously thought to be, as the study of parts of the story, especially
philological and iconographic aspects, will soon make clear ––an important
consideration for the on-going debate on the nature and complexity of cultural
borrowings. Such study also sheds some light on the extent of Near Eastern
influence on early Greek culture.**8**
The argument will proceed as follows. First, after a
rapid synopsis of the stories, the mythological motifs they have in common will
be laid out in detail. Secondly, I will propose an explanation for their use
and shape in Jonah. Finally, it will be shown that the use of some of
these common themes persisted in the later (mostly Christian) iconography of
Jonah.
THE STORIES
In the extant written versions of the Argonauts' tale,
Jason, son of Aeson, and great-grandson of Aeolus the wind, is given by his
rival Pelias the impossible task of bringing back the Golden Fleece from
Colchis. This is the fleece of a ram which was sacrificed after saving Phrixus,
in a story reminiscent of the Aqedah in Genesis 22. The Golden Fleece is
hanging on a tree in Ares' sacred wood in Colchis, Aeetes' kingdom, and is
guarded by a never-sleeping dragon. At Jason's call, the bravest of the Greeks
hurry to the Argo, a ship built for Jason by Argos, with Athena's help. On
their way to Colchis, the country of the sunrise in the Orient, the Greeks meet
with many challenges. The greatest danger they encounter in trying to reach
their goal is a stormy sea in which they must pass through the shifting or
clashing rocks, the Planctae or Symplegades, which the sea alternately pushes
apart and brings together. Once in Colchis, they ask king Aeetes for the
Fleece. He promises it to Jason, provided the latter can subjugate the
brazen-hoofed and fire-breathing bulls, plow a field, and sow the teeth of the
local dragon. Jason manages these feats with the crucial help of the king's
daughter, Medea. Because Aeetes goes back on his word, Jason sets out to steal
the Golden Fleece. He succeeds, again with the help of Medea, who puts the
ever-watching dragon to sleep with a magic potion. The Argonauts then flee with
the Fleece and the king's daughter.
Jonah's tribulations, in contrast to Jason's, begin with
a divine call. The task proposed by God to the hero of the book of Jonah is to
bring a divine warning to the traditional enemy of Israel. However, rather than
obeying, Jonah flees to the other end of the world, on a ship going to
Tarshish. During the storm caused by God, the pagan crew, in great fear, prove
to be respectful of all gods, especially Jonah's, and helpful to the hero.
Jonah tells them he is the cause of the storm and following his advice, they
reluctantly throw him overboard. He is swallowed by a large fish, kept in its
entrails for three days, and finally vomited out onto dry land, after a long
prayer which he expresses in the form of a psalm.
God reiterates his call, in spare words, and Jonah goes
to Nineveh where he reluctantly announces the oracle, insisting on the
impending doom. The oracle has been barely broadcast —Jonah has walked but one
day in a city "of three days"— yet its call is immediately heeded by
the Ninevites, and even more surprisingly, by the king who, though hardly
informed of it, takes sackcloth and begins to fast. He orders all his subjects,
even animals, to do likewise, in the hope of turning away God's anger.
God's anger gives way to mercy, which in turn makes Jonah
very angry. He storms out of Nineveh, builds a hut wherein he waits to see what
will happen. Overnight, God makes a miraculous tree grow; Jonah finds its shade
soothing and pleasant. Next, God sends a worm which causes the tree to die and
a hot wind which makes Jonah wish for death. In the ensuing discussion between
God and Jonah, God shows that his concern for the Ninevites is at least as
valid as that of Jonah for the shade tree. The story ends abruptly, without
indicating whether Jonah accepts God's point of view or not.
MOTIFS COMMON TO THE ARGONAUTICA AND JONAH
Several parallel motifs are of considerable significance
in both stories: the names of the heroes, the presence of a dove, the idea of
"fleeing" like the wind and causing a storm, the attitude of the
sailors, the presence of a sea-monster or dragon threatening the hero or
swallowing him, and the form and meaning of the difficult word kikayon.
Looking at these themes and motifs reciprocally illuminates both accounts.
Names
First of all, the names of the two sea adventurers appear
to be strikingly similar, at least in Greek. Jonah’s name in Hebrew, Yônah,
when transliterated in Greek as Iônas, can easily be seen as a
metathesis of Iasôn. Whether that was a factor in the author's choice of
a name cannot be known. But it is curious to read in the twelfth-century
commentator Eustathius that an ancient tradition thought the name Jason was a
metathesis of his own father’s name, Aisôn.**9** The fluidity of this
name, together with the personality of the hero, may explain why Jason was one
of several Greek names often used by Jews in Palestine, Egypt, and Cyrenaica,
at least from the third century BCE on.**10** Regarding Cyrenaica, it is
notable that in some of the many variants on the return of the Argonauts,**11**
the latter reach Africa and meet a Triton, the merman of pre-Greek mythology,
who announces to them that Cyrene would be the possession of their descendants.
The legends and the name of an heroic sailor circumnavigating the sea on the
first mythic long-ship would have appealed to Jews and other peoples who were
settling around the Mediterranean sea. This interest is still in evidence at
the time of the so-called “Tomb of Jason” in Jerusalem, which is dated to the
beginning of the first century BCE and contains a Greek inscription and the
drawing of a military ship.**12**
Doves
The second element in the comparison of the two stories
concerns the name of Jonah alone. Yônah in Hebrew means “dove,” one of
the birds used in very ancient sailing practice to guide lost sailors to land,
as we see both in the story of Noah and the saga of Jason and the
Argonauts.**13** When the Argonauts arrive at the Clashing Rocks (the
Symplegades) and are unable to find a way out, Phineus, a king-prophet hunted
by the Harpies (perhaps because he has betrayed divine secrets), advises the
heroes to release a dove to see if it will go through (The story uses an old
theme which appears already in a different form in the Odyssey: the flock of
doves bringing ambrosia to Zeus must also go through the Planctae but
invariably one dove is lost). The Argo eventually follows the dove; bird and
ship find a passage through the rocks, but not without leaving a few vestiges
behind them —one, its feathers and the other, pieces of rigging. In other
variants of the story, doves also play an important role; in Virgil's Aeneid,
for instance, two doves lead Aeneas and the Sybil to the Golden Fleece hanging
in a tree.**14** In other texts, the prophecies uttered by an oracular oak are
reported by doves.**15**
Boreas the fleeing wind
There is a further connection to Phineus, who in
Apollonius’ Argonautica, is pursued by the vengeful Harpies because he
has betrayed prophetic secrets. After promising the Argonauts that he will help
them with his prophetic gifts, he is delivered from his pursuers by the
Boreads, the “fleers,” sons of Boreas, the northern wind that brings the worst
storms at sea.**16** The story of Jonah begins very abruptly with his flight,
right after God's command that he go and deliver his oracle to Nineveh. Jonah
betrays nothing of the divine message entrusted to him, but he flees to avoid
its accomplishment (as he sees it), and does so without explanation. He flees
from the consequences of the message he has received but, paradoxically, not
the structure of prophetic tales, in which one expects failure. In these
stories, the structure is as follows: the more trustworthy the prophets, the
less willing to hear them their audience will be. Above all, kings are expected
to resist the message and punish the messenger, thereby increasing the element
of veracity for the audience of the story. In fear of retaliation, Elijah flees
to the Horeb after his victory over the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel, walks
one day in the desert, sits under a broom tree, and asks for death, saying:
"Israel has forsaken the covenant, slain prophets, and I, even I only, am
left."**17** In the second part of his adventure, Jonah also flees to an
analogue of the desert, that is, a dry place, with wind, as opposed to the
fluid and humid vastness stirred up by storm winds. But he is not pursued.
Jonah does what prophets (and Jason and his friends) are supposed to do,
namely, he flees, but for no apparent reason. He is pushed by rhetorical reason
alone, the force of the text and previous biblical stories.
The puzzling motif of Jonah's flight, however, is
connected to the Argonautic cycle of stories in two ways. First of all, it
indirectly creates a storm caused by God’s great wind, in Hebrew ruah gdolah.
Secondly, the Hebrew word for fleeing in Jonah 1.2, boreah,
corresponds closely to the name of Boreas, the storm god and father of the
Boreads. A "fleeing" sea creature, a leviathan, actually appears in
the texts of Ras Shamra and is mentioned in Isaiah 27.1 and Job 26.13. It is a
sea monster originating in the primordial chaos and threatening chaos. In the
story of Jonah, however, the "fleeing" is separated from the monster,
yet still connected to a storm. I propose therefore that the Greek word Boreas
has a semitic origin, perhaps the Ugariticboreah. Chantraine’s Dictionnaire
étymologique du grec classique gives no sure origin for the Greek word, but
the presence of other Argonautic elements in the story of Jonah makes it
distinctly possible that mythical elements surrounding Boreas were borrowed by
the Greeks, together with the name, from Semitic mythology. The stories
surrounding this divinity or hero associated with storms were adopted at a much
earlier stage, perhaps at the end of the second millennium before our era. The
sound change from a pharyngeal to an alveolar fricative ("heth"
to "s") is natural, since Greek lacked the former (a later example of
this sound change appears in one of Jerome's letters, in which he speaks of a
Silas whose Hebrew name is Shaloah).
Sailors
In Greek stories and in ancient folklore in general,
sailors had a terrible reputation. It was thought that they were only after
passengers’ possessions and money, which they could try to obtain, for example,
by forcing a victim to sign a will in their favor before throwing the person
into the sea. The sailors in the Argonauts’ saga are of an heroic type and do
not do this. They are dangerous, however; in the later Argonautica Orphica,
these adventurers behave according to expectations and become angry at Medea,
because she has been denounced by the speaking or prophesying beam of the Argo.
They are ready to throw her to the fish but Jason calms them in time to save
her.**18** In a different story reported by Herodotus, sailors behave also as
expected, throwing Arion of Mytilene overboard, out of greed for his money and
possessions. He is saved by a dolphin which is sensitive to his poetic and
musical gifts.**19**
By analogy, then, the much debated psalm in the book of
Jonah could be, among other things, a parody of widely known stories about
music-loving animal helpers. In any case, Jonah’s sailor companions, contrary
to what an ancient audience would expect, are respectful, tame, and even
unselfish, though the reason for their civility may be simply a healthy fear of
Jonah's God. Here is a man who, seemingly imprudently or rashly, has hired the
whole ship and paid in advance, an action noted as unusual in talmudic
literature.**20** He is a foreigner, alone, without protector or friend, at the
mercy of a whole crew against whom he could never retaliate. Yet, these rough fellows
not only do not attempt to kill him out of greed, but they do a most dangerous
thing in stormy weather: they try to bring the ship to shore to save their
onerous passenger.**21**
According to a literal interpretation of his Hebrew name,
Jonah is a "dove" kept in the hold of the ship, something light and
capable of flight. Yet, he engages in a downward movement, going down to Jaffa,
into the ship, then down into its hold, where he falls into a deep sleep (wayyerâdam,
a word also evoking, phonetically at least, a downward movement), and finally
down into the great fish. Normally, passengers and crew were on the deck. The
Hebrew text suggests that Jonah himself becomes part of the cargo; he is a
piece of the ballast, often merchandise but normally stones or sand, kept in
the depths of the hold of the ship. Surely, he is stowed in the most dangerous
place of the ship, among stones and heavy cargo which could crush him in a
storm. One might think of him as being in the same position as the oak beam
placed by Athena Pallas in the Argo, a beam which occasionally utters
"true" prophecies or predictions. The beam reveals Zeus' anger and
invites the heroes to purify themselves,**22** or warns that they are being
pursued by the Erinyes, who avenge wrongs, especially murders committed among
kinsmen.**23** Another similarity is that in helping the crew, and being
"helped" by them, Jonah is acting like Phineus the seer, already
mentioned above, whom the Argonauts –specifically the Boreads, Calais and
Zetes, sons of Boreas– help after receiving precious information from
him.**24**
Sea-monsters
There is no musically enchanted dolphin in the book of
Jonah, but a large fish or ketos who swallows and then vomits up the
hero. Neither is there a leviathan or dolphin in the extant textual variants of
Jason’s odyssey. But Jason does fight a sea- or land-monster in several of the
variants of the tale, often represented on vases, in actions similar to those
of Heracles.**25** Or in scenes found widespread around the Mediterranean,
Jason emerges from a coiled, upright serpent or monster.**26** It is in this
context that earlier scholars briefly noted the connection with Jonah. In
particular, a beautiful red-figured cup found at Cerveteri (Caere) in 1833 and
dated from the beginning of the fifth century BCE (490-475) shows a scaly and
wide-eyed monster vomiting a limp, naked, bearded, and long-haired Jason (see
plate). To the right of the scene is Athena, with spear in her right hand, bird
in her left, and perhaps looking into the eyes of the dragon, whom she has
commanded to disgorge Jason.**27** Behind the dragon’s head, at left, the
Golden Fleece hangs as limp as Jason, on a tree laden with fruit (apples?). It
is most natural to conceive of this monster as a sea-monster, as did A. Flasch
and other scholars,**28** given the position of Cerveteri, an Etruscan sea-port
which would be understandably interested in Jason's Gesti as those of
the first navigator. An abundance of maritime themes at the place is evidence
of this interest. The Boreads themselves do not appear to be represented at
Caere but they figure prominently in many other places, for instance, in
Laconia.**29**
This cup has been widely commented upon in the past, but
has remained unnoticed, as far as I am aware, by biblical commentators. Late
XIXth and turn-of-the-century commentators offer varying interpretations of
this scene. A. Flasch thinks that the dragon is alive, forced to disgorge a
passive Jason, which is also my interpretation.**30** Flasch is followed by H.
Schmidt and others, e.g. Pfuhl and Kerényi. Vian, in his recent edition of
Apollonius' Argonautica, mentions the cup without comment. M. Lawrence,
after E. Pfuhl and K. Kerényi, thinks it is a sea-monster "forced by Athena
to disgorge Jason [....] a rare variant of the famous story."**31** The
rest of Lawrence’s article deals with the iconography of Jonah's story. But the
commentary of P.E. Arias and M. Hirmer on Athena is inexact. They think that
Athena, with owl, is looking with surprise at Jason coming out of the dragon’s
mouth.**32**
It is interesting to discover that a version of Jason's
story had Athena as his helper, rescuing him from death, which is perhaps
closer to the role of the Hebrew God in the book of Jonah. The bird she carries
on her left hand, however, is not necessarily the usual owl, as all
commentators seem to identify it,**33** but could actually be a dove (or a sea
bird). Athena's owl is usually represented with its head turned outward, facing
the viewer, at least in all images of her catalogued in the Lexicon
Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae.**34** On the Caere cup, the bird has
a straight beak and a more sloping body. However, since ornithological details
may not have been the concern of the vase painters, the idea of a dove can only
remain a suggestion. The role played by doves in reporting prophecies and
helping heroes has been mentioned above: in Apollonius’ Argonautica, the
crew of the Argo takes along a dove in a cage. They also are featured in
several illustrations of the episode of the capture of the fleece.**35**
The "kikayon"
In the second part of Jonah's story, the word kikayon is
a famous hapax legomenon which, in its context, refers to a plant, with
later tradition hesitating between a type of gourd and ricinus communis
(castor oil).**36** Many interesting explanations have been offered, none of
them entirely convincing.**37** No one seems to have noticed, however, that
this word sounds very much like the brew prepared by Medea, kukeon or kukaon
(from the verb kukaô, to stir up, to create confusion), in Apollonius'
version and in the Argonautica Orphica.**38** Here, a mysterious potion,
a mixture made of medicinal and dangerous plants,**39** is used by Medea to put
to sleep the serpent or dragon guarding the tree where the fleece was hanging.
In Apollonius, Medea rubs the head of the monster with the potion and sprinkles
it to achieve the same result. In some later (Roman) representations, she is
shown presenting a vial to the serpent coiled around the tree, while Jason,
unseen, grabs the Golden Fleece. The kukaon or kikaon is also the
name of the drink of barley gruel and water, associated with Eleusinian
mysteries,**40** where perhaps the role of the python had been similar to that
of the sea monster in ancient versions of the tradition. The problem is that
the kikayon of the Hebrew story is obviously a fast-growing plant, not a
potion or brew. Yet, the Greek magic mixture is clearly made with
pharmacological plants. Furthermore, whatever the Hebrew kikayon
denotes, it acts as an emetic or aims at making Jonah rid himself of his anger,
in a punning parallel with his disgorgement from the fish. I would like to
suggest, then, that the kikayon of the book of Jonah may have lost its
original meaning but has retained the idea of a magic act, perhaps together
with the emetic or purging virtue of the original, suggested by the Hebrew
sound (wayaqe` in Jonah 2.11, from the verb qi`)
associated later with other plants, such as the ricinus. In the Hebrew
text also, the dragon has been reduced to a worm, an annoyance whose night
work, however, makes Jonah wish for death. In the second part of Jonah's story,
there is no magician (daughter of a king) or any dragon to be put to sleep.
There is, however, a gleeful and absurd reduction of the Greek monster to the
size of a worm and the fire-breathing of an irate Jonah whom God attempts to
calm down.
THE FUNCTION OF GREEK MOTIFS IN JONAH
It is not surprising in itself that motifs and characters
from a version of the story of the Argonauts would appear in the book of Jonah,
when one considers how widespread they are in the literary (from the fifth c.
BCE) and iconographic record (from the eighth c. BCE) of the whole
Mediterranean region. Furthermore, the Hebrew story is far from being a pale
recasting of Jason's adventures. First of all, the related elements of flight
and storm complicate the picture, in that Semitic versions of this story had
been circulating for an even longer time, and had themselves been borrowed by
the earliest Greek settlers of the Mediterranean. The Greeks seem to have
borrowed a Boreas and sea-monsters at an early date. Textual and pictorial
materials show that Greeks took over stories of sea-monsters from the East in
the early, so-called “orientalizing” period.**41** Behind Jonah's story and its
vestigial echoes of Jason and the Argonauts, there are remains of an older,
more widely told story of a fight between a god and a sea-monster.**42** These
stories all seem to belong to the category of tales of voyages to the
netherworld.**43** Secondly, the creator of Jonah appears to be playing in a
very conscious manner with some of the elements and motifs of the Greek story,
inverting some, laminating others, or fusing them with Hebrew themes on the
basis of linguistic or structural similarities.
One may begin with the complex geography of the
Argonauts' saga, which has been drastically simplified in the story of Jonah,
with only Tarshish and Nineveh mentioned as presumably summarizing the known world
contained between these extremities. And then there is, at least at a
superficial level, the beneficial dove of the Argonauts' tale which is turned
into an occasion of trouble for the sailors of the Hebrew story. At a deeper
level, however, it causes the conversion of the crew, who sacrifice to the
proper god after they have been saved. Throughout the ordeal they act civilly,
even generously, though not heroically, instead of showing the greed and lack
of courage which are their normal attributes, as in the much later and edifying
story of Paul of Tarsus' shipwreck in Acts 27.**44** The storm is not a
dangerous moment for Jonah but rather simply a means to return the hero to the
land he should not have left. Instead of being sent away on a highly risky
journey by a jealous or fretful king figure, he chooses to bring his fate upon
himself. The king in the second part of the story is not a frightening or
vengeful character bent on eliminating or testing the hero or prophet, as are
Pelias, Aeetes, or even Jezebel in Elijah's story. Rather, he is most pliable,
a keen listener, obedient and prompt to repent. The never-sleeping dragon
guarding the Golden Fleece has been miniaturized and become a worm. I have
suggested above that some of its characteristics have been given to Jonah
himself, who watches intently over the city he wishes to see destroyed. Like
the dragon preventing Jason's possession of the wondrous Fleece (a magical
remain of a foundational sacrifice), Jonah fiercely blocks access to divine
mercy. He is willing to face God in hot anger and apparently knowing no reason.
The pharmaceutical mixture which Medea uses to put the monster to sleep has
changed in form but retained its soothing quality for the overheated Jonah.
Yet, the leafy kikayon remains somewhat of a conundrum. In the later
iconography to be mentioned below, Jonah is seen resting under, or surrounded
by, a large-leafed bush which resembles some of the earlier images of the tree
in which Jason finds the Golden Fleece. Perhaps tree and magic mixture have
been associated from the earliest times.
The question now is whether this recasting of the Greek
story has been done simply in jest, or is part of a more complex structure. The
comparison of certain themes present in both stories may throw some light on
this problem. Jason’s calm, contrasted with Aeetes’ anger, parallels Jonah’s
extraordinary passivity. Jason needs assistance at every crucial turn of the
story and appears weak, a kind of anti-hero.**45** But Jonah’s passivity does
not stem from meekness, rather it comes from his extreme view of prophecy.
Medea’s night monologue in Apollonius’ Argonautica 3.771ff., when she is
wavering in her desire to help Jason tame Aeetes' monstrous bulls, presents
interesting parallels to that of Jonah. Perhaps it is not overly speculative to
say that the way in which Apollonius presents hellenism as immensely seductive
to Medea, daughter of a tyrant, has its counterpart in the Hebrew author’s idea
of a natural attraction that pagan sailors, and Nineveh’s king and people feel
for the Jewish God. This appeal has little to do with Nineveh, whose historical
kingship ended at a much earlier time than the composition of this story, but
would make sense in an atmosphere of competition between Hebrew and Greek cultures.
The author might be inverting the image of attraction presented by Greek
civilization and so present foreigners suitably attracted to the Hebrew
divinity when they are Greeks (the sailors?), and stupidly so when they are
Ninevites.
Recent studies of the book of Jonah, while discovering
new layers of meaning in the story, have exposed the complex structure of the
narrative.**46** They reinforce the notion that the work is an ironic parable,
one with a pointed question. The parallels we have detected between the story
of Jonah and that of Jason point even more strongly in the same direction. To
the irony underlined by several commentators,**47** it is possible to add a new
twist, namely that Nineveh encompasses the “Ionians” also. Nineveh and Yavan
sound similar, as do Yônah the "dove", Yôniyah the
ship, and Ionia the region. Phonetically as well as mythopoetically, it appears
that the author of the book of Jonah is playing with a variant or variants of
Jason's adventures as told in Greek and other languages, selecting some of its
motifs or sounds and refashioning them for altogether different purposes, all
the while with a view to entertain. The author manipulated a myth which had
become alien and re-elaborated parts of it in order to reflect on and reinforce
his own culture.**48** The hero’s name, a storm caused by a fleeing/northern
wind, uncontentious sailors, a sea-monster swallowing and regurgitating the
hero under divine command, a monster diminished to worm size in the second
part, a magic emetic ––all these serve the author’s meaning.
If it is true that the element of mockery of the Greeks
is part of this story, then all the more reason to set aside the view of the
book of Jonah as a didactic parable teaching that divine compassion knows no
boundaries and is universal.**49** Christian exegetes in particular have often
propounded a universalistic interpretation, put forward by Jerome, for
instance, and especially by Ephrem the Syrian, who had his own neighborly
reasons to offer a literal interpretation and present the Ninevites in a
flattering light.**50** Philo of Alexandria could have been expected to offer
this kind of interpretation but it is absent from his commentaries on
Jonah.**51**
In line with tradition, I would argue rather that the
problem posed by God's boundless compassion is the primary subject of this
story. The question is framed in an ironic and even tragic mode, in spite of
the author's apparently jocular manner. The geographical or ethnical
considerations on the bounds of divine compassion which later (Christian)
interpretation found congenial add a new, secondary dimension to the original
story, the main point of which is to highlight a debate or question intrinsic
to Israel. It is the answer to that question, in turn, which may be given
universal significance.
As commentaries have long shown, the book of Jonah
presents a reflection on the dangers of prophecy. In Israel, oracles of doom
had long before given place to conditional oracles, which were better suited to
the vagaries of historical circumstances. But the conditions for belief in
conditional oracles appear to have developed also in the Graeco-Roman world.
Even though on the surface they differ in mode, goals, and significance, a
self-questioning or ironic discourse on prophetic traditions arose in both
cultural areas.**52** Similar questions were raised in Hebrew and Greek stories
regarding the functioning of divine justice and mercy and their mechanism. This
is not to say that the Greek and Hebrew Weltanschauungen of the time
were identical. Rather their differences are to be sought at another level, in
the tautness of the question that the author is asking Israel, as will
presently be seen. This tenseness, I suggest, stems from the structure of the
Hebrew faith, in which the dialogue regarding the mechanisms of history was
projected as being conducted with a God who is creator of the universe, and
therefore free and totally gracious, above any contingency. This divinity might
well decide to reverse or change the flow of nature or history, thus lifting
the burden of fatality. From the prophet's point of view, however, the kind of
conditional oracles that the nature of the divinity required made the dangers
of life altogether too predictable.
Yet, the story of Jonah contains a more poignant idea
than a concern for the prophet's thorny position. If the tale places its hero
Jonah in a rhetoric of prophecy that is problematic, it also implies a basic
questioning of Israel's relation to God. Jonah is apparently caught in a dilemma
between basic tenets of Israel's faith whose consequences the author
exaggerates to bring them into clear conflict. Jonah is shown as trapped
between two extreme ideas: one is the notion of the automaticity, swiftness,
and infinite range of God's justice and anger in response to Israel's failures;
the other is its converse, namely the automaticity, and infinite patience, of
divine compassion.
One may imagine the ancient Hebrew or Judaean audience of
the story smiling at the Ninevites' (or Ionians') expense, for how could the
latter be so dense as to think of divine mercy as remotely possible for them?
Furthermore, how could this compassion be exercised towards people who, in
Israel's estimation, did not even know the boundaries of sinful action and included
in it their domestic herds? Here, there may have been a dark joke or innuendo,
still having force for later Jewish commentators, regarding the sexual mores of
Ninevites (or Greeks/Ionians; it may have been a joke often reciprocated). But
Nineveh is the converse of Israel, where prophetic and Deuteronomistic
traditions would have it that conversion has hardly ever been completed in the
past, or that it has been accomplished by a few rare individuals, and
specifically not by kings, who need repeated warnings in the normal discourse
of prophecy.
The story contains a logical exercise or equation which
can be formulated as follows: If a conversion which is rhetorically and
historically wrong (no effort by the "prophet;" too obedient a king;
in Nineveh the paradigmatic enemy) brings about the immediate and full benefits
of divine mercy, then shouldn't the listeners ask themselves what is the proper
dynamics of conversion and mercy? "How much" conversion is actually
necessary, at what point does mercy "kick in," and what must one do,
short of total conversion, which is actually so impossible that it looks silly?
The author's vision of what a divine determinism would entail is amusing, at
least superficially. But this vision of the world is ironic, in that it questions
the listeners' ordinary notions, which are of a world bound by determinisms of
all kinds, yet freed, even at the most physical level, by the word of God.
In the book of Jonah, physical nature is entirely removed
from the reach of determinism: storm, fish, worm, are all appointed by divine
command. But, and this to me is part of the irony of the book, determinism is
applied to the divine sphere. In Greek stories, on the contrary, there is
considerable fickleness to be found in the Greek gods. So, here too, the author
might be thinking about Greek conceptions of the world, under cover of
anti-ninevism. The lesson of the book, if there is one, is the strengthening of
"ordinary" or common perceptions —I mean ordinary for a listener or
reader of the biblical stories— not for a non-Hebrew, say a Greek, who
precisely has these beliefs, namely that the gods are all powerful, and that
nature is essentially ruled by unpredictable gods. The hidden philosophy of the
book, to be derived from its ironical posture, would be exactly contrary to its
surface story and to popular forms of Greek wisdom. It would be suggesting that
there is determinism in nature, but complete divine freedom.
In Greek mythology and theater, the precautions taken to
keep the heroes away conspire to bring them back to the center of the drama
through a complicated chain of events. The book of Jonah does away with the
niceties of the complex mechanism which Greek drama slowly unfolds and presents
a hero who, though naked and battered, remains proud before his God.
ECHOES OF JASON IN THE LATER ICONOGRAPHY OF JONAH
Jonah as naked hero features prominently in later
Christian iconography. Scholars have shown that ancient versions of sea stories
and especially their iconography (for instance combinations of the story of
Heracles and Hermione), were integrated more or less successfully in Christian
retellings and illustrations of Jonah’s story.**53** I suggest that among the
themes re-employed in this iconography, some of the motifs of the Jason cycle
might have an important role which has not been brought to light until now, at
least to my knowledge. Motifs which were common to both stories in the fifth
and fourth centuries BCE (and even before?) are still fused together in the
first centuries of our era. I can indicate only briefly some of the parallels
and adaptations, however, while hoping that a full study of the representations
of Jason and Jonah be undertaken in the future to check the hypothesis.
The transformation of motifs taken from Graeco-Roman
depictions of other heroes and their re-employment in Christian and Jewish
representations of Jonah have long been noted. For instance, it has been shown
that the image on a sarcophagus from Santa Maria Antiqua of a naked Jonah
resting languidly under a vine, closely resembles that of Endymion reclining in
seemingly beatific pleasure, with his right arm stretched behind his
head.**54** Structurally speaking, however, and without dismissing the
aforementioned striking comparison, the presence of a ship, a sea monster to
the left (not a whale or fish), a tree (not a gourd?) above Jonah, with a ram
and two sheep (?) above him, and a woman standing to his right ––all of these
elements make sense as the continuation of the Jason imagery. I propose
therefore that the artist conflated stock images of both Jason and Endymion. I
note also that this paradisiac interpretation of Jonah under the gourd, though
in line with the Jewish interpretation of the sukkah and the Christian
idea of resurrection, and fitting long-standing representations of Endymion and
even Jason (there is an Edenic quality to the wood where the latter finds the
Golden Fleece), is completely contradictory to the sense one gets of Jonah in
the Hebrew story, namely that of an angry and sulking man. Furthermore, in the
Biblical story, the episode of the gourd is placed after Jonah goes to Nineveh
and is well separated from the storm and disgorgement episode. But in the
Jewish or Christian iconography of Jonah, the gourd scene is set close by the ship
and sea-monster or whale, and Nineveh is altogether absent. The simplest
explanation for this juxtaposition is that painters and sculptors were fitting
familiar images from Greek mythology onto Jonah's story.
In one of his letters, Augustine answers, or rather
dodges, a curious question asked by a pagan friend of the Carthage priest
Deogratias, who is writing to the bishop of Hippo for intellectual ammunition
he might use in his discussions with that friend.**55** The question seems to
be occasioned by a representation of Jonah very much like the one described
above, and other similar images in which the ocean adventure and the “gourd”
scene are juxtaposed. The pagan friend wishes to be enlightened about the
meaning of the gourd plant growing above Jonah, who has just been disgorged by
the monster.**56** This pagan man may have heard the biblical story but more
certainly he has seen Jonah represented as vomited by a monstrous sea-creature
on the seaside, probably naked,**57** under the gourd. The scenes of the
vomiting and the gourd could be kept apart, as in the fourth century mosaic at
Aquileia, for instance. Yet there are numerous representations setting both
motifs side by side. One could argue that this proximity was a function of
artistic convenience alone but it makes good sense to see in it the direct
influence of the figurative Jason cycle.
A proper elucidation of the role of the Jason story in
these traditions might help to explain some of the questions that ancient
representations posed for early Christian interpreters and exhortative
preaching. There are curious silences in early Christian teaching regarding,
for instance, the treatment of the episode of the gourd, Jonah’s nakedness and
baldness, which stand out in contrast to the images of Jonah. The latter detail
forms an interesting puzzle: compare Jason on the Cerveteri cup, bearded, with
long wavy and glistening hair, hanging below him like the fleece, and Jonah.
Jason’s lustrous hair is also mentioned by Pindar.**58** Early pictures of
Jonah, likewise, show him long-haired, occasionally bearded. An eastern
Mediterranean marble figure from the second half of the third century CE, for
instance, has a bearded, long-haired and naked Jonah being vomited out of a
sea-monster (part whale?).**59** For the Midrash on Jonah, however, the
heat inside the monster was so intense that Jonah lost his clothes and his
hair. But in this case, it may have been the classical representations of yet
another hero, namely Heracles, which brought about the theme of baldness and
nakedness (though, as mentioned in a note above, nakedness seems to have been a
standard component of any image of shipwrecked victims). As for the gourd
usually shown above Jonah, it might have been part of the stock images used for
Jason at a very early stage. In an Etruscan bronze mirror of the fifth- or
fourth-century BCE, a long-haired Jason (HEIASUN, see plate) emerges from the
dragon with sword in his right hand, fleece in his left, surrounded by what
appears to be a broad-leafed plant having the shape of a vine and bearing fruit
which look like melons.**60**
These are only a few of the iconographic parallels and
adaptations. A thorough study of the representations of Jason and Jonah would
show in detail in what way century-old images of Jason were attached to Jonah
in the first centuries CE. Eventually, though, the Christian messianic
interpretations of the Hebrew story asserted their influence and slowly altered
the nature and presentation of the repertory of stock images.
To conclude, I note that the persistence of these images
and themes over the centuries in a wide cultural area is a striking phenomenon.
The cultural bonds between Greece and Israel were stronger than has been
thought sometimes, although the borrowings were made in all directions and the
resulting knots are near inextricable. Yet I hope to have shown that replacing
the stories of Jonah and Jason in the wider context of their Mediterranean
matrix enriches their meaning and leads serendipitously to new philological
observations. Now, the use of widely scattered mythological themes by the
author of the book of Jonah does not necessarily mean that the influence of
Greek language and institutions was very deep in Israel, even in the last
centuries B.C.E.**61** In fact, the author plays with these heroic stories very
much as he questions the Hebrew prophetic accounts. The book might therefore be
interpreted as a chapter in the multi-sided resistance to hellenistic culture.
It is hoped that a more thorough study of the rhetoric of prophecy in Israel
and Greece, together with a fully developed analysis of the iconography of
Jason and Jonah, will yield even more assured results in the future.
**1** See A. Feuillet, "Les sources du livre de
Jonas," Revue biblique 54 (1947) 161-86; P.L. Trible, Studies in
the Book of Jonah (Ph.D. Diss., Columbia, 1963) 107-8, 110-12; J. Sasson, Jonah.
A New Translation with Introduction, Commentary, and Interpretation (The
Anchor Bible, 24B; New York: Doubleday, 1990) passim.
**2** 2 See Sasson, op. cit., pp. 331-40.
**3** 3 See A. Feuillet, art. cit., p. 162; E. Bickerman,
Four Strange Books of the Bible (New York: Schocken, 1967) mentions also
the stories of Arion in Herodotus and Heracles’ three day sojourn in a sea
cave. A. Feuillet, after reviewing the possibilities, thinks that the results
are meager and unimportant. P. Trible reviews all previous proposals, op. cit.,
pp. 127-52.
**4** 4 The most important work is by H. Schmidt: Jona.
Eine Untersuchung zum vergleichenden Religionsgeschichte (Göttingen, 1907),
pp. 22-23. As the title indicates, this is a broad comparative study which, in
the opinion of Y.M. Duval (in: Le livre de Jonas dans la littérature
chrétienne grecque et latine. Paris: Études Augustiniennes, 1973) is
carried too far. Flasch, Angebliche Argonautenbilder (Munich: F. Straub,
1870); Welcker (Alte Denkm˛ler); Radermacher (Mythos und Sage bei den
griechen, Leipzig: R.M. Rohrer, 1938, p. 183; alsoDas Jenseits im Mythos
der Hellenen, pp. 67ff.); Kerényi also (in The Heroes of the Greeks,
London: Thames & Hudson, 1959).
**5** Not in Feuillet or in Sasson. The work of H.
Schmidt (above, note 4) is not mentioned in J. Sasson’s bibliography.
**6** Abbreviated as LIMC from now on, vol. V,
books 1 and 2, see under Jason.
**7** J. Sasson speaks of "vestiges of tales"
but does not specify their origin (pp. 16-18).
**8** A question most recently addressed by W. Burkert, The
Orientalizing Revolution (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press) 1992,
about the archaic period. The book appeared in German in 1984.
**9** Eustathius, Commentarii ad Homeri Iliadem pertinentes
(M. Van der Valk, Leiden: Brill, vol. 1, 1971, p.773, lines 15-17).
**10** See Corpus Papyrorum Judaicarum, vol. 3
(1964), p. 179, 9 mentions. For Cyrenaica, see index in W. Horbury and D. Noy, Jewish
Inscriptions of Graeco-Roman Egypt (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University
Press, 1992), p. 326. Also: A. Lalonde, “La Cyrénaïque romaine des origines à
la fin des Sévères (96 av. J.-C.–235 ap. J.-C.),” Aufstieg und Niedergang
der Römischen Welt, vol. II/10.1 (1988), p. 1045. Note the names of high
priests under Antiochos IV: Onias, then his brother Jason, then Menelas.
**11** In Pindar, Pyth. 4.
**12** See The New Encyclopaedia of Archaeological
Excavations in the Holy Land, vol. 2 (Jerusalem/New York: Israel
Exploration Society and Carta; Simon andSchuster, 1993), p. 751.
**13** Apollonius, Argonautica 2.317f.; 2.555f.
The use of doves may have been a most ancient technique. It is not documented
in J. Rougé, La marine de l'antiquité, Paris: P.U.F. (1975), or in L.
Casson, Travel in the Ancient World (London: Allen & Unwin, 1974).
**14** Aeneid 6.190f.
**15** Soph. Trachiniae 169f.; Servius, In
Aeneidem 3.466.
**16** Bora is still the name of a northern wind coming
from Dalmatia and causing storms in the Adriatic Sea: J. Rougé, La marine de
l'antiquité, Paris: P.U.F. (1975) 24. The Boreads are pictured as winged
creatures, often naked, as in LIMC III/1 (1986), pp. 126-33.
**17** 1 Kings 19.10. The whole story of Elijah in
1 Kings 18.20-40.
**18** AO 1155-77.
**19** Herodotus, History 1.4. Parallel evoked by
E. Bickerman, among others (see note 3 above).
**20** bNedarim 38a; PRE 10. Tradition
hesitates about the nature of the payment: Jonah’s passage alone, or the value
of the entire cargo, a problem evident in the difference between MT and LXX,
and which puzzled Jerome, In Ionam 1.3. See Y.M. Duval, Le livre de
Jonas dans la littérature chrétienne grecque et latine (Paris: Études
Augustiniennes, vol. 1, 1973) p. 100, n. 158, following L. Ginzberg, Legends
of the Jews, vol. 6 , p. 349, n. 28.
**21** As noted by J. Sasson, Jonah, New York: The
Anchor Bible (1990), 141-42.
**22** AO 1157; Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica,
4.580-91.
**23** AO 1159.
**24** AR 2.172-530.
**25** Like Heracles, who fights a sea-monster to save
Hesione, for instance; see E. Bickerman, Four Strange Books of the Bible,
p. 11.
**26** LIMC V/2 (1990), p. 427, no. 30: seventh
century scene, with Jason long-haired and bearded; p. 428, no. 34.
**27** Reproduced in color in P.E. Arias and M. Hirmer, Le
vase grec, Paris: Flammarion (1962), fig. 147 (Italian original 1962. Also
ET, with marked differences). Also in H. Schmidt, op. cit., p. 23; Kerényi, The
Heroes of the Greeks, fig. 62; now in LIMC, vol. V/2, p. 428 (fig.
Iason 32).
**28** Flasch, Angebliche Argonautenbilder
(Munich: F. Straub, 1870), p. 27.
**29** See Laconian iconography. Check LIMC
on Boreadae.
**30** Angebliche Argonautenbilder (Munich: F.
Straub, 1870), chapter 3, p. 25. See also Radermacher, Das Jenseits im
Mythos der Hellenen, p. 67. But see Welcker, Alte Denkm˛ler, p. 378.
**31** "Ships, monsters and Jonah," American
Journal of Archaeology 66 (1962), 294, pl. 78, fig. 7. She is following E.
Pfuhl, Malerei und Zeichnung der Griechen, vol. 3, Munich (1923) pl.
164, no. 467; and K. Kerényi, The Heroes of the Greeks (1959) fig. 62,
pp. 264–65, for a commentary on the Cerveteri vase.
**32** "A l'intérieur, Athena casquée, armée de
l'égide et de la lance, la chouette dans la main droite, assiste, étonnée, à
l'approche du héros Jason (ijvason) qui sort de la gueule ouverte du
dragon."
**33** P.E. Arias and M. Hirmer, Le vase grec,
Paris: Flammarion (1962), fig. 147 and p. 80 for a brief commentary.
**34** LIMC II/1 (1984) 975-76; II/2 (1984) No.
187, etc.
**35** A fifth to fourth century BCE Greek volute-krater
features doves in two trees connected with the Jason story: LIMC V/2
(1990), Iason 17. The Golden Fleece hangs from an olive-tree, to the left, and
a dragon is coiled around the trunk of an apple-tree (?) to the right.
**36** Note that Aquila and Theodotion transcribed the
word, kikeôna (Sasson, p. 292).
**37** Surveyed and evaluated by B.P. Robertson,
"Jonah's Qiqayon Plant," ZATW 97 (1985) 390–403.
**38** Not in Pindar, but in several passages of the
version in Apollonius of Rhodes and in the Argonautica Orphica.
**39** Note also the tradition of fast-growing trees in
AO (?).
**40** See A. Delatte, "Le Cycéon, breuvage rituel
des mystères d'Eleusis," Revue d'Histoire et de Philosophie Religieuses
32 (1954) 690-748.
**41** K. Shepard, The Fish-Tailed Monster in Greek
and Etruscan Art, New York and Menasha, Wisc.: Privately printed and G.
Banta Co. (1940), 4-9, for mermen 10-11, 19, 43-44 for discussion of the
origins of Skylla, a sea-monster popular in the 5th c. BCE. There is no mention
of Jonah in this work. See also G. Ahlberg–Cornell, Heracles and the
Sea-Monster in Attic Black-Figure Vase-Painting, Stockholm: P. Åströms
Förlag (1984), 17, for Near Eastern influence on Greek art in the middle of the
7th c. B.C. This author suspects Corinth had a special role in this cultural
transmission in that period. Now see W. Burkert, The Orientalizing
Revolution. Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture, Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1992.
**42** See J. Fontenrose, Python. A Study of Delphic
Myth and its Origins. Berkeley: UC Press (1959) 121–45, esp. 133–34;
143–45.
**43** Fontenrose, ibid., p. 485.
**44** On which see G.B. Miles and G. Trompf, "Luke
and Antiphon: The Theology of Acts 27-28 in the Light of Pagan Beliefs About
Divine Retribution, Pollution, and Shipwreck," Harvard Theological
Review 69 (1976) 259-67.
**45** For Jason as anti-hero, see G. Lawall,
“Apollonius’ Argonautica: Jason as Anti-Hero,” Yale Classical Studies 19
(1966) 119-69.
**46** Especially J. Magonet, Form and Meaning:
Studies in Literary Techniques in the Book of Jonah (1976); D. L.
Christensen, "The Song of Jonah: A Metrical Analysis," Journal of
Biblical Literature 104 (1985) 217-31.
**47** On Jonah as a parody: A. Band, "Swallowing
Jonah: The Eclipse of Parody," Prooftexts 10 (1990), 177–95, who
may be exaggerating the comic effect. Band is in substantial agreement with J.
Miles especially, M. Burrows, B. Halpern and R. Friedman, J.C. Hulbert, J.
Ackerman and others. The parodic interpretation has been strongly opposed by
several authors, esp. A. Berlin.
**48** Cf. E. Gruen, "Cultural Fictions and Cultural
Identity," Transactions of the American Philological Association
123 (1993) 1-14.
**49** For instance, this is considered the main point of
the story in The New Jerome Biblical Commentary (Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
Prentice Hall, 1990), pp. 580-84.
**50** See E.E. Urbach, "Tshuvat anshey
Nineveh" Tarbiz 20 (1959) pp. 119-20.
**51** Duval, vol 1, p. 77. See F. Siegert, Drei
hellenistisch-jüdische Predigten (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum NT,
vol. 61, Mohr: Tübingen, 1992).
**52** See E. Bickerman, Four Strange Books of the
Bible (1967), pp. 29-33, where he explains the evolution of oracles of doom
(fata denuntiativa) and conditional prophecies.
**53** See important pages in Y.M. Duval, Le livre de
Jonas dans la littérature chrétienne grecque et latine (Paris: Etudes
augustiniennes, 1973), esp. pp. 13-19 for texts and 19-39 for figurative art.
**54** T. F. Mathews, The Clash of Gods. A
Reinterpretation of Early Christian Art. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1993, fig. 13, and pp. 30-31 (following Von Sybel, see
Mathews’ note 16). A structurally similar image of Jonah asleep under staked up
gourds, with long hair and no beard, appears on a third century (end) fragment
of a sarcophagus lid in the Louvre museum: see P. Du Bourguet, Early
Christian Art (New York: Reynal &Co.; William Morrow & Co., 1971),
p. 39.
**55** Letter 102.6; see Y.M. Duval, vol. 1, p.
28.
**56** Augustine, Letter 102.6.30: “Quod sibi
etiam vult supra euomitum Ionam cucurbitam natam?”
**57** He mentions the incredible fact that a man could
have been swallowed fully clothed by the fish. Nakedness, however, was part of
the motif of the shipwrecked victim, and applies to Jason as well as to Jonah.
**58** Pyth. 4.82-83.
**59** P. Du Bourguet, Early Christian Art, p.
109.
**60** LIMC V/2 (1990), Iason 35; see also H.
Schmidt, op. cit., fig. 5, p. 24.
**61** The book was probably written in the fifth or
fourth c. B.C.E. But as J. Sasson writes (op. cit., p. 328), this book is not
written "in a style favorable to historical inquiry," and is
difficult to date.