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AN ASS’S HORN FOR ALEXANDER THE GREAT: ANTIPATRID COUNTER-PROPAGANDA AND THE POISONING OF THE KING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 December 2025

Irene Pajón Leyra*
Affiliation:
University of Seville
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Abstract

Aelian and Porphyry claim that only the horns of a specific species of Scythian ass can contain the corrosive water of the Styx. They also state that Alexander the Great received one of these horns from a certain Sopater as a gift, on which he had an epigram engraved before dedicating it at Delphi. This article explores the connection between this story and the reports of Alexander’s alleged assassination by the Antipatrids. In these reports, the poison used is often said to be the water of the Styx, held in an equine hoof. The tale reported by Aelian and Porphyry can be interpreted as part of the propaganda war during the time of the Diadochi, specifically as a piece of counter-propaganda responding to the accusation of treason against Antipater and his family and aiming to exonerate them.

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Two different sources, the zoological work of Aelian (NA 10.40, second–third century c.e.) and Porphyry’s Περὶ Στυγός (1.49.52, third century c.e., quoted by Stobaeus in his Anthology, fifth century c.e.),Footnote 1 transmit a curious story about a rare species of horned ass in Scythia. The horns of these peculiar animals are said to be the only vessels able to contain the corrosive and poisonousFootnote 2 water of the so-called Styx, a spring in Arcadia connected with the famous watercourse of the same name in the Underworld.Footnote 3 One of these horns was presented to Alexander the Great by a certain Sopater, about whom we have no further information. In view of its extraordinary nature, the king dedicated it to Apollo at Delphi, having inscribed on it a short epigram consisting of two elegiac couplets. The epigram is quoted by both authors, with slight differences.Footnote 4

Aelian and Porphyry are the only extant testimonies for this story. They offer complementary versions that, even if they substantially agree, differ in the details. Aelian seems mainly interested in stressing the natural marvels of the story: the strange asses and the astonishing nature of their horns, able to resist the water of the Styx, which is also itself an extraordinary substance:

ἐν τῇ Σκυθίᾳ γῇ γίνονται ὄνοι κερασφόροι, καὶ στέγει τὰ κέρατα ἐκεῖνα τὸ ὕδωρ τὸ Ἀρκαδικὸν τὸ καλούμενον τῆς Στυγός· τὰ δὲ ἄλλα ἀγγεῖα διακόπτει πάντα, κἂν ᾖ σιδήρου πεποιημένα. τούτων τοι τῶν κεράτων ἓν ὑπὸ Σωπάτρου κομισθῆναί φασιν Ἀλεξάνδρῳ τῷ Μακεδόνι, καὶ ἐκεῖνον πυνθάνομαι θαυμάσαντα ἐς Δελφοὺς ἀνάθημα ἀναθεῖναι τῷ Πυθίῳ τὸ κέρας, καὶ ὑπογράψαι ταῦτα·

σοὶ τόδ’ Ἀλέξανδρος Μακεδὼν κέρας ἄνθετο, Παιάν,
κάνθωνος Σκυθικοῦ, σχῆμα τὸFootnote 5 δαιμόνιον,
ὃ Στυγὸς ἀχράντουFootnote 6 Λουσηίδος οὐκ ἐδαμάσθη
ῥεύματι, βάσταξεν δ’ ὕδατος ἠνορέην.Footnote 7

In Scythia there are asses with horns, and these horns hold water from the spring of Arcadia known as the Styx; all other vessels the water cuts through, even though they be made of iron. Now one of these horns, they say, was brought by Sopater to Alexander of Macedon, and I learn that he in his admiration set up the horn as a votive offering to the Pythian god at Delphi, with this inscription beneath it:

In thine honour, O Paean, Alexander of Macedon set up this horn from a Scythian ass, a divine figure, which was not subdued by the stream of the untainted Lusean Styx, but withstood the strength of its water.Footnote 8

Porphyry, for his part, included the story in a work dedicated to the water of the Styx, whose main purpose was a scholarly commentary on the Homeric poems. His main interest is not, therefore, to describe the bizarre Scythian asses and their remarkable horns, and this aspect is much less developed in his text.Footnote 9 Instead, he provides us with important pieces of erudite information, notably his source.Footnote 10 He was Philon of Heracleia, author of a paradoxographical collection of marvels (Περὶ θαυμασίων) dedicated to the historian Nymphis (early third century b.c.e.),Footnote 11 which included the anecdote:Footnote 12

ἐν ταὐτῷ· ἐπειδὴ περὶ τοῦ Στυγὸς ὕδατος ὁ λόγος ἐστί, δηλῶσαί σοι βούλομαι καὶ ἑτέραν ἱστορίαν περὶ τοῦ αὐτοῦ. Φίλων γὰρ ὁ Ἡρακλεώτης ἐν τῷ Πρὸς Νύμφιν περὶ θαυμασίων ἐν Σκύθαις φησὶν ὄνους γίγνεσθαι κέρατα ἔχοντας, ταῦτα δὲ τὰ κέρατα δύνασθαι τοῦτο τὸ ὕδωρ διαφέρειν· καὶ Ἀλεξάνδρῳ τῷ Μακεδόνι ἐνεχθῆναι ὑπὸ Σωπάτρου κέρας τοιοῦτο, ὃ καὶ ἀνατεθῆναι ἐν Δελφοῖς, ἐφ’ οὗ καὶ ἐπιγεγράφθαι·

σοὶ τόδ’ Ἀλέξανδρος Μακεδὼν κέρας ἄνθετο, Παιάν,
κάνθωνος Σκυθικοῦ, χρῆμά τιFootnote 13 δαιμόνιον·
ὃ Στυγὸς ἀχράντῳFootnote 14 Λουσηίδος οὐκ ἐδαμάσθη
ῥεύματι, βάσταξεν δ’ ὕδατος ἠνορέην.Footnote 15

In the same book [that is Porphyry, On the Styx]: As the theme is about the water of the Styx, I want to divulge for you another story about the same. For Philon of Heracleia (FGrHist/BNJ 1676 F 1) says in his To Nymphis about Marvellous Things Footnote 16 that in Scythia there are asses that have horns, and that these horns are able to hold this water; and that to Alexander the Macedonian such a horn was brought by Sopater; this horn was given as an offering in Delphi, and it was inscribed:

To you, Paean, has Alexander the Macedonian offered this horn from a Scythian ass, a divine piece, which was not destroyed by the untainted stream of the Lusean Styx, but withstood the strength of its water.Footnote 17

Another story is more widely attested, also connecting Alexander and the water of the Styx: according to Trogus, Vitruvius, Pliny, Curtius, Arrian, Pausanias and Plutarch,Footnote 18 it was said that Alexander died the victim of a plot, poisoned with this substance by the clan of Antipater. The story has been widely studied by scholars and, beyond the question of the historicity of the conspiracy, there is a general agreement about the origin of the narrative in the context of the early conflicts between the Diadochi and related discourses of propaganda. Our extant accounts are therefore normally construed as the literary reflection of political pamphlets that circulated during the early Hellenistic period, associated with the diverse factions fighting for power.Footnote 19

The anecdote related by Aelian and Porphyry has received much less attention.Footnote 20 Scholars have frequently commented on its similarities to the story of the poisoning of Alexander, and concluded that the narrative about the Scythian horn does not seem to contain any allusion to the assassination.Footnote 21 But it is difficult to accept that two narratives, both involving the water of the Styx and Alexander the Great, are not related. Perhaps this lack of references to the poisoning is the clue by which we may glimpse the original context and aim of the story of the horned Scythian ass. One particularly relevant detail has not been given the attention it deserves: if Alexander admired the horn and offered it at Delphi, after engraving an epigram on it, this implies that he was not killed by the water of the Styx held inside. That is, the story attested by Aelian and Porphyry can be read as disproving the rumours about the plot, and construed as a rebuttal of these rumours by stating that someone (an unknown ‘Sopater’, whose name recalls that of Antipater) sent Alexander the dangerous poison (the water of the Styx and the horn containing it), not to kill him, but as a gift, and that he was still alive when it was presented to the Delphian god. The original aim of the tale can best be understood as a piece of counter-propaganda, intended to divert suspicion of poisoning from the family of Antipater, who were regarded as responsible for the death of Alexander. Let us examine the elements of the story—the water of the Styx, the identity of Sopater, the Scythian ass (with its wonderful horn) and the epigram—in light of this.

THE WATER OF THE STYX AND THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT

Two different questions arise regarding the alleged use of Stygian water to poison Alexander the Great: When did the story begin to circulate? And where did the idea that a horn could be a suitable vessel for this substance come from?

Shortly after the great king’s unexpected death, a rumour arose that his end was not due to natural causes, and that he had been the victim of a conspiracy involving some of his closest friends. Everyone’s finger seems to have been pointed at Antipater specifically as the main instigator of the plot. Having had some significant disagreements with the queen mother Olympias and fearing the reaction of an angry Alexander,Footnote 22 Antipater was said to have sent a powerful poison to Babylon through his elder son, Cassander,Footnote 23 to be poured into Alexander’s cup by his younger son, Iollas, then serving as the king’s cup-bearer. Antipater and his family had the motive, the means and the opportunity to kill Alexander, and many of their enemies were doubtless ready to profess belief in and to spread the accusation.Footnote 24 According to the pseudo-Plutarchan author of the Lives of the Ten Orators, Hyperides even ironically suggested to the Athenians that they should honour Iollas for administering the poison.Footnote 25 The extremely cruel treatment Antipater inflicted on Hyperides, cutting out his tongue before he was executed in 322 b.c.e.,Footnote 26 is difficult to explain other than as a reprisal for the orator’s contribution to spreading the whispers about a plot. This means that less than a year after the death of Alexander, suspicions around Antipater had reached mainland Greece.Footnote 27

There is little doubt that the story of the assassination arose almost immediately after the king’s death. However, the extant testimonies about Hyperides and the earliest rumours of foul play say nothing about the poison Antipater is supposed to have usedFootnote 28 or how it reached Babylon. Only later accounts of the treason, most dating from the late Hellenistic or the Roman period, name the water of the Styx (or an unspecified substance that resembles it), brought to Babylon by Cassander in a horse’s hoof and later poured by Iollas into the king’s cup. With slight differences, this is the version we find in the works of Trogus, Vitruvius, Pliny, Quintus Curtius, Arrian, Plutarch and Pausanias.Footnote 29 These sources are unanimous about the container of the poison, all of them mentioning an equine hoof; none considers the possibility of a horn, let alone a fantastical ass’s horn, serving this purpose.

Several different rumours probably began to circulate simultaneously.Footnote 30 However, at some point the version with the water of the Styx seems to have become predominant. Perhaps the distinctive characteristics of this substance partially explain the success of the story: a king as extraordinary as Alexander could surely not be assassinated by a simple poison. The narrative needed an extraordinary means, one capable of killing the semi-divine conqueror of the world whose lineage could be traced back to Heracles, Achilles and Zeus himself; and a mythical liquid like the ominous water of the Underworld seems to be a perfect fit.Footnote 31 Moreover, the alleged effects of this substance resemble some of the symptoms experienced by Alexander on his deathbed, where he suffered a progressive general paralysis, lost the ability to speak and, apparently, remained unconscious for several days before he died: according to Hesiod (Theog. 775–98), who offers the earliest testimony about this water and its power, its extreme coldness is resisted only by gold, and it is taken to Olympus by Iris in a golden vessel to be used in a lie-detector test among the gods. If a god swears an insincere oath, after drinking it he or she falls deeply asleep, unable to eat, speak or even breath for one year.Footnote 32

The story about the water of the Styx used as the poison was circulating already in the early Hellenistic period, during the time of the Diadochi. Plutarch indicates that Antigonus the One-Eyed (died 301 b.c.e.) knew it (see below), and the fact that Philon of Heracleia mentioned the story of Sopater and the Scythian ass’s horn in the early third century b.c.e. provides further evidence that this specific version of the conspiracy was known before Philon. We have no evidence, though, of the precise moment when it began to circulate or who started the rumour. Still, the political situation and the new alliances made after the death of Antipater in 319 b.c.e. seem to have marked a turning point in the propaganda war between the Diadochi, and these changes probably affected the narrative of the plot to kill the great king. Specifically, around 317 b.c.e. the suspicions of an assassination seem to have grown stronger. It was at that moment that Olympias returned after years of exile in Epirus as an ally of Polyperchon; once in Macedonia she ordered the execution of Nicanor, another son of Antipater, and had Iollas’ ashes disinterred and cast to the wind, deeds she asserted to be vengeance for the death of her son (Diod. Sic. 19.11.8). Surprisingly, Plutarch points to this moment as the beginning of the rumours that Alexander was assassinated, a statement that scholars have interpreted as indicating that Olympias revived the story of the conspiracy, after six years of silence imposed by Antipater and his family.Footnote 33 It is tempting to connect the success of the story about the Stygian water to this historical context. Unfortunately, beyond the Antipatrids’ responsibility for the murder and Iollas’ active involvement, we have no details of the plot in which Olympias believed.

Olympias’ return to Macedonia, however, coincides with another event likely to have had an effect on the propaganda of the time, since 317 b.c.e. is also the year in which the Peripatetic philosopher Demetrius of Phaleron, an ally of Cassander, was designated governor of Athens, where he remained until Demetrius Poliorcetes expelled him in 307, prompting his flight first to Thebes and then to Egypt.Footnote 34 Some of the extant accounts of Alexander’s poisoning, namely Pliny’s, Arrian’s and Plutarch’s, add that Aristotle was involved in the conspiracy, though his name is absent from the other sources. This has led to the idea that Aristotle did not appear in the narrative when it started to circulate but was included later, and some scholarsFootnote 35 have construed the accusations against him as an attempt to delegitimize Demetrius, who was marked by the Peripatetics’ proximity to Antipater’s clan. If the accusations against Aristotle were in fact directed against Demetrius of Phaleron, and the inclusion of Aristotle’s name is a secondary development in the evolution of the rumours about the water of the Styx brought to Babylon inside a hoof, then the end of Demetrius’ service as governor of Athens marks a terminus ante quem for the creation of the rumours about Aristotle’s involvement, and the original story was necessarily circulating before that moment.

In this context, it is probably significant that the ancient sources indicate a connection between the Peripatetic school and the idea that horn vessels resist the corrosive power of the water of the Styx. Thanks to the paradoxographer Antigonus,Footnote 36 it is attested that Theophrastus dealt with this substance and its properties in his lost work Περὶ ὑδάτων, explicitly mentioning its deadly effect on anyone who drank it. Perhaps, then, that poison was associated not only with the master of the Peripatos but also with his disciple, who moreover was Demetrius’ mentor. But, most importantly, in the same fragment Theophrastus appears to be the only ancient author clearly attested to have described the vessels able to hold this water as κεράτινα, pointing to horn as the material capable of withstanding the substance’s corrosive action. Sharples noted the ambiguity of this description, indicating that κεράτινος could also designate a hoof; he based his argument on the statement of Aristotle that hoof and horn, specifically those of the unicorn, consist of the same substance.Footnote 37 Nevertheless, there are no clear testimonies of the adjective κεράτινος used to describe a hoof.Footnote 38 In any case, the alleged ambiguous expressions concerning the container of the Stygian water would be limited to Antigonus’ quotation of Theophrastus.Footnote 39 This might lead us to suspect a Peripatetic origin of the story about the Scythian ass and its wonderful horn.

Περὶ ὑδάτων was likely written after 310 b.c.e.Footnote 40 There is no textual evidence of Theophrastus’ interest in the Stygian water before that time, at least seven years after Demetrius’ rise to power and thus closer to Demetrius’ expulsion from Athens than to the beginning of his governorship. Given the accumulative character of Peripatetic natural science, the late composition of Περὶ ὑδάτων does not by itself prove that the properties of this liquid were not a subject of the scientific discussions at the Peripatos before that moment.Footnote 41 Still, further arguments seem to place the accusations against Aristotle around the end of Demetrius of Phaleron’s governorship: Plutarch states that the claims about Aristotle’s involvement in the plot came from a certain Hagnothemis, who supposedly heard it from Antigonus ‘the king’ (ὡς Ἀντιγόνου τοῦ βασιλέως ἀκούσαντα). Antigonus was proclaimed king by his army in the year 306 b.c.e. (Diod. Sic. 20.53.1–4), that is, immediately after Demetrius’ expulsion. The reference in Plutarch’s text does not necessarily mean that Antigonus was already king when Hagnothemis heard the story; it could simply be a way of identifying him when the story was recorded. Moreover, it is not possible to verify whether Antigonus started these rumours or only helped to spread them.Footnote 42 Still, with all due caution, the extant textual evidence about the rumours aimed at delegitimizing Demetrius of Phaleron, and the possible hints of a Peripatetic origin of the answer to these rumours, seem connected to the later years of Demetrius’ governorship.

THE ENIGMATIC SOPATER

Other details of the story can perhaps also be construed as aimed at diverting suspicion from Antipater and his family: Aelian and Porphyry mention a certain Sopater as the person who presented the Scythian horn to Alexander. However, the identity or even existence of this individual has not been clearly established. BerveFootnote 43 describes him as ‘someone of unknown origin and homeland’ and Heckel, while acknowledging this unknown origin and casting serious doubts on the historicity and truth of his story, tentatively identifies this elusive figure with the poet Sopater of Paphos.Footnote 44

The name Σώπατρος seems to have been common in the Greek world, and it is widely attested in both epigraphical and papyrological sources.Footnote 45 The Greek literary tradition also includes a number of people with that name.Footnote 46 Among them, however, only the aforementioned Sopater of Paphos, an author of parodies and comedies, seems to have been a contemporary of Alexander.Footnote 47 Nevertheless, according to the testimony of Athenaeus,Footnote 48 he seems to be too young to be our Sopater: he is mentioned as ‘born in the time of Alexander, the son of Philip’, that is, after 336 b.c.e., and having lived until the second Ptolemy (king in 285 b.c.e.). He was thus barely a teenager when Alexander died. Moreover, apart from being born under Alexander’s rule, there is no evidence of any other connection between this person and him, nor any indication of an interest in natural marvels on his part.

A solid identification of Sopater is, for the moment, impossible. But, again, perhaps the obstacles to identifying him are not mere chance, but the result of a deliberate decision. The most plausible identification of the Sopater of our story is that proposed by Giannini in the commentaries to his edition of the Greek paradoxographers: analysing the text of Porphyry as a fragment of Philo’s paradoxographical work,Footnote 49 he states: ‘Σωπάτρου: Antipatrum habent Plin. Plut.’ That is, in Giannini’s opinion, ‘Sopater’ appears in Philo’s text instead of ‘Antipater’, a name whose phonetic similarity is self-evident.

The man ultimately responsible for the arrival of the Stygian water in Babylon, Antipater, appears in Porphyry’s and Aelian’s story transformed into the otherwise unknown Sopater. Giannini’s brief statement does not indicate how he interpreted this substitution: is the name Sopater just a mistake, the product of textual corruption from an original Antipater? Perhaps; still, if the story reported by Aelian and Porphyry is considered as a whole, the change admits other interpretations. Every element of the conspiracy story appears to be systematically altered in the anecdote of Aelian and Porphyry. The observed changes are always partial, though, so that the original items are not substituted by something entirely different, but only modified, reversed or blurred. Instead of dying, poisoned by the water of the Underworld, Alexander receives an extraordinary gift and inscribes a votive epigram on it. The deadly water is not transported hidden inside a hoof, but openly and inside another equine body part: a horn, moreover a peculiar one, belonging to an ass, not an animal renowned for that appendage. In this context, it is not strange that the name of Antipater was subjected to the same treatment and that his name was replaced by a similar one, so that Alexander should receive this wondrous object not from the man everyone blamed for his death, but from a mysterious Sopater, an enigmatic figure with a common name and no clear identity. Furthermore, a substitution of Antipater by Sopater could have happened as late as six years after the death of Alexander, if the hypothesis is accepted that the story told by Aelian and Porphyry has its origins in the Peripatetic School and started circulating only after Demetrius’ accession to the governorship of Athens, in 317 b.c.e. (or perhaps even later, close to his expulsion from Athens in 307 b.c.e.; see above). In that case, perhaps the passage of time had helped for memories to be confused and misleading elements to be inserted in the story.

HORNED ASSES IN SCYTHIA AND ELSEWHERE

As noted above, Porphyry attributes the story of the ass’s horn to Philon of Heracleia. Scholars like Sharples,Footnote 50 for instance, have interpreted the deviations from the ‘normal’ story about the poisoning of Alexander, and in particular the substitution of the usual hoof by a horn, as due to the paradoxographer’s aim to astonish his audience. However, it seems unlikely that it was the paradoxographer himself who inserted this modification. First, dependence on earlier sources is one of the most conspicuous characteristics of the paradoxographers,Footnote 51 and therefore the presence of the anecdote in a work called Περὶ θαυμασίων should, in principle, entail the existence of an earlier source, a work on natural science or, perhaps in this case more likely, an historiographical text, maybe one dealing with the Diadochi.Footnote 52 Second, paradoxographers certainly modified their sources to create astonishing effects, but their modifications do not normally affect the content of the original information. They rather eliminate expressions of doubt, rational explanations, similar examples, etc.,Footnote 53 but their working method does not allow alterations of the source so profound as the substitution of an unremarkable hoof by an extraordinary horn invented out of nothing; these were not creative works. Therefore, Scythian horned asses and their virtues were presumably not an invention of Philon: they belonged to the original story of his source text.

Nevertheless, the paradoxographical and astonishing nature of the horn observed by Sharples, compared to an ordinary hoof, is impossible to deny. When the anecdote was invented, therefore, someone felt the need to substitute the hoof of the original account of the poisoning by a fantastical horn. If the anecdote is read as counter-propaganda, perhaps this extraordinary horn is essential, because it justifies the dedication of the object at Delphi. A normal hoof, from a common ass, horse or mule, even if it was said to hold water sourced from the Underworld, could not easily be presented as inspiring Alexander to offer it to Apollo. However, as we will see, the deposit of the horn in the sanctuary is probably indispensable to the effectiveness of the story.

Scythian horned asses have attracted little attention from scholars, with the exceptions of Page’s commentary to his edition of the epigram and Tolić’s paper dedicated to our anecdote.Footnote 54 They agree in considering that our Scythian ass is the same animal as the legendary Indian ass, that is, the unicorn. In their opinion, the Indian rhinoceros, which lies at the origin of the legend of the unicorn, is behind the curious asses of Aelian and Porphyry, too. The contribution of Tolić is particularly interesting, given that her study is, to my knowledge, the only one where the anecdote of Porphyry and Aelian is not interpreted as a testimony of a story about an attempt to kill Alexander, but rather about a gift intended to protect him from poisoning. Tolić connects the story to an old Indo-Iranian tradition of kingly gifts, in which drinking cups made of the horn of the unicorn were an extremely precious present, reserved only for persons of the highest nobility.Footnote 55 Therefore, so Tolić explains, Aelian and Porphyry reflect the original story, later misinterpreted and wrongly understood as dealing with a plot to assassinate Alexander. The horn, then, in her interpretation, is the original vessel, and the equine hoof a variation, aimed at rationalizing the more extraordinary elements of the story.

But Tolić’s original hypothesis offers no clear evidence indicating that the accounts of Stygian water held inside a hoof might have originated from our story about the horned Scythian asses. The tradition about the plot is unanimous regarding this detail. All the authors who clearly identify the water of the Styx as the chosen poison agree in mentioning a hoof as its vessel,Footnote 56 and none mentions a horn or any other animal body part.

Reports of Indian asses whose horns have wonderful medical properties form a well-defined tradition in Greek literature. Scythian horned asses, on the contrary, are attested nowhere else. Therefore, the anecdote recounted by Aelian and Porphyry invites a new question: given that the Greek world had an established and coherent tradition about wondrous horned asses in India, why was it necessary to create a ‘Scythian version’ of this animal? Among the historians and authors dealing with natural science, Scythia is persistently regarded as a territory inhospitable to asses; from Herodotus onwards, testimonies abound stating that, due to the extreme cold of its climate, it is impossible to breed asses in Scythia, an assertion that many authors follow, notably Aristotle.Footnote 57 Herodotus (4.191) does attest the existence of a peculiar species of ass whose major notable feature is its possession of horns, but he places them in Libya, not in Scythia, and no special powers are explicitly attributed to them.Footnote 58

A generation after Herodotus, Ctesias of Cnidus brought the Greek world his famous report about Indian marvels, among them the strange Indian ass and its legendary horn, which later sources would soon transform into the unicorn that would echo throughout the centuries:

ὅτι εἰσὶν ὄνοι ἄγριοι ἐν τοῖς Ἰνδοῖς … κέρας δὲ ἔχει ἐν τῷ μετώπῳ … ἐκ τούτων οἱ πιόντες, κατασκευάζουσι γὰρ ἐκπώματα, σπασμῷ, φασίν, οὐ λαμβάνονται οὔτε τῇ ἱερᾷ νόσῳ· ἀλλ’ οὐδὲ φαρμάκοις ἁλίσκονται, οὔτ’ ἂν προπίωσιν οὔτ’ ἂν τῷ φαρμάκῳ ἐπιπίωσιν ἢ οἶνον ἢ ὕδωρ ἢ ἄλλο τι ἐκ τῶν ἐκπωμάτων.Footnote 59

There are wild asses in India … They have a hornFootnote 60 in their brow … They say that whoever drinks from the horn (which they fashion into cups) is immune to seizures and the holy sickness and suffers no effects from poison, whether they drink wine, water, or anything else from the cup either before or after ingesting the drug.Footnote 61

The power of the Indian ass’s horn as universal antidote is also reported by authors such as Aristophanes of Byzantium (Epit. 2.612), Aelian (NA 3.41), Philostratus (V A 3.2) and Timotheus of Gaza (Epit. 31.14), and, through the influence of the Physiologus (ch. 22), it entered the culture of the Middle Ages.Footnote 62 The miraculous virtues of the horn of the Indian ass depend on a well-established tradition.Footnote 63 From the earliest references to this object, it is possible to read of its effect of inhibiting all kinds of poisons, providing their owners, mainly kings—sources indicate that possession of such vessels is exclusive to royaltyFootnote 64 —with a means to avoid being murdered should there be a conspiracy against them.

If we accept that the origins of the anecdote of Aelian and Porphyry are not connected to natural science, and that it does not reflect a real event during the reign of Alexander, but rather was invented as political propaganda after Alexander’s death, several aspects of the reading of Page and Tolić need to be reconsidered. First, it makes no sense to seek a realist interpretation of the story of the Scythian horned ass or a clear preceding tradition in the Greek scientific or historiographic literature. This creature can best be understood as specifically created for this story.

It is still possible to see the Indian ass and its famous horn as the model on which the Scythian horned ass was based, so that it can be regarded as a sort of elaboration on the Indian legend. But the relationship between the two animals needs to be nuanced and their differences deserve attention. Rather than a model, the stories about the horn of the Indian ass might be understood as an anti-model of our anecdote about the Scythian species, at least in terms of the use of the objects derived from them. The virtues of the unicorn’s horn and of the one Alexander dedicated to Apollo are both connected to poison. The Indian horn is a vessel which offers both a medical remedy for diverse illnesses, including the holy sickness (epilepsy), and protection against poisoning; its Scythian counterpart, however, has the virtue of containing the water of the Styx, that is, instead of inhibiting poisons in general, it allows the handling of one particular, very powerful poison.

If the ultimate aim of our story was to prove that there was no intention of killing Alexander on the part of the Antipatrids, perhaps the horn of the unicorn could not serve that purpose. The ancient sources depict it as inhibiting the effect of poisons drunk by the victim of a conspiracy. Thus, if a horn of Indian ass appeared in our story, this association could lead the audience to think that Alexander was indeed the victim of a plot, and survived thanks to the protection of the miraculous object. However, nothing in the story indicates that the king drank the water of the Styx. He dedicated it out of ‘admiration’, as Aelian puts it, for the horn’s capacity to withstand that water.

The Scythian ass and its wondrous horn therefore seem to be an ad hoc invention, created specifically to fulfil a double function: (1) to explain why the king, astonished by its extraordinary nature, dedicated it at Delphi; (2) to avoid the risk of referring to a unicorn horn, which could have been interpreted as a sign that there was indeed a plot against the king, frustrated thanks to the extraordinary container.

THE EPIGRAM: A PAST-CREATING STRATEGY AT WORK?

In Page’s opinion, the poem, which he apparently regards as a real inscription engraved on a real object offered at Delphi by Alexander, was probably written ‘shortly before 323 b.c.’,Footnote 65 that is, shortly before Alexander died in Babylon.Footnote 66 However, if our hypothesis is accepted, it should rather be dated at some point after the rumours of a plot by Antipater and his family began circulating, and possibly even after Demetrius of Phaleron and the Peripatetic School became a collateral target of the propaganda against Antipater’s family, in 317 b.c.e.

Beyond its date, if the epigram is read as part of a counter-propaganda campaign, its whole meaning needs to be reinterpreted. Scholars have repeatedly acknowledged the value of votive offerings deposited in temples as testimonies of a narrative, points of reference for historical memory, material traces of the past of a place, a family or a whole city.Footnote 67 A sanctuary is a space invested with authority, and the offerings inside it, in particular if they are inscribed, seem to be authenticated, verified ‘relics’, directly connected to a specific historical or even mythical context. Modern philosophers have distinguished between ‘things’ and ‘objects’, the former being raw elements of the material world, whereas the latter are individualized.Footnote 68 Such a distinction is potentially relevant in the case of our horn and its inscription. An inscription can provide the inscribed thing with a past, making it tell a story and transforming it from mere thing to an ‘object’, which is unique and meaningful.Footnote 69

In the case of our anecdote, the epigram is the key element that makes everything fit, attesting that Alexander, alive and well, not the victim of any conspiracy, witnessed for himself the power of the extraordinary horn, and afterwards made a dedication in the temple of Apollo. Observe the past tense in the epigram: the horn ‘was not subdued’ (οὐκ ἐδαμάσθη) and ‘withstood’ (βάσταξεν) the water, presenting the capacities of the object as proven facts, not mere potentialities. The epigram and the story around it should be read as a textual forgery, intended to attest that the great king did not die after receiving the poisonous Stygian water inside a wondrous horn and, perhaps, to identify an object deposited in Delphi as the horn of a Scythian ass, the very specimen that Alexander had in his hands.

In principle, the inscribed horn, the material trace of the story, was available for the temple’s visitors to admire, and for sceptics to verify. At least theoretically, anyone could confirm the existence of a horn at Delphi inscribed as the story indicates. We will never know if there was a real horn inside the temple of Apollo on which this epigram was engraved, a fake deposited at the sanctuary to guarantee the story. The possibility cannot be excluded that the desire to create a convincing account led to the fabrication of the corresponding material evidence. Delphi had lost its independence in the time of Alexander’s father, and from 317 b.c.e. it was under Cassander’s control.Footnote 70 Presumably, it would not have been difficult for the Antipatrids to have a particular object deposited there and made to appear as an offering made at an earlier time.

Nevertheless, the ‘real’ existence of a horn in Delphi does not seem indispensable: most of Cassander’s enemies, who could have reacted with scepticism to the story about the Scythian horn, were probably not able to check the existence of the curious object. Moreover, the rumours of conspiracy were not based on any material evidence. They were damaging to Antipater and his family by their existence alone; equally, the mere circulation of our anecdote could have been enough to counterbalance the rumours, even in the absence of material traces of the alleged facts. Indeed, examples like the Lindian Chronicle show the extent to which claims of an inscribed object inside a temple can appear trustworthy, even in the absence of both object and inscription.

CONCLUSION

All the diverse elements of the anecdote reported by Aelian and Porphyry seem to fit the interpretation of it as a response to the rumours of assassination circulating about the Antipatrids. The fantastical Scythian horned ass, its horn that withstands the corrosive water of the Styx, the reference to Sopater as bearer of the gift to the king and the engraving of the votive epigram to Apollo transmit echoes of a narrative that emerged in the context of the propaganda war among the Diadochi in the early Hellenistic period, perhaps connected to the Peripatetic school. Later, the narrative seems to have ended up as part of a collection of paradoxa, reused as a piece of zoological information and as part of an erudite commentary on Homer. We will never know if, before this long journey, the story succeeded in reaching the right audience, and if it achieved the desired effect.

Footnotes

*

This study has been developed in the context of the research project El prisma romano: ideología, cultura y clasicismo en la tradición geo-historiográfica, II (PID2020-117119GB-C22), directed by Francisco J. González Ponce. I am indebted to CQ’s reader for valuable advice and to Alwyn Harrison for help with English copyediting. All URLs were current when consulted on 29th December 2024—I dedicate this article to Professor Francisco Javier Gómez Espelosín for his 70th birthday.

References

1 Cf. Porph. fr. 375F Smith, fr. 6 Castelletti. See A. Smith, Porphyrii Philosophi fragmenta (Stuttgart and Leipzig, 1993), 446–7; C. Castelletti, Porfirio: Sullo Stige (Milan, 2006), 237–45.

2 On the possibility of toxic bacteria in the spring see A. Mayor, ‘Alexander the Great: a questionable death’, in P. Wexler (ed.), History of Toxicology and Environmental Health. Toxicology in Antiquity, Vol. I (Amsterdam etc. 2014), 52–9, at 58.

3 See Hes. Theog. 786–92, cf. ibid. 775–7. On the Arcadian location see Hdt. 6.74; Strabo 8.8.4 (cf. ibid. 5.4.5); Paus. 8.17.6.

4 Cf. Anth. Pal. app. 3.1.99; D.L. Page, Further Greek Epigrams (Cambridge, 1981), 436–7 (Anonymous Epigrams no. 128).

5 χρῆμά τι in Porphyry. See M. García Valdés, L.A. Llera Fueyo and L. Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén, Claudius Aelianus: De natura animalium (Berlin, 2009), 251.

6 ἀχράντῳ in Porphyry. Aelian’s text, however, agrees with MSS F and P of Stobaeus. See Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Anthologii Librum Primum rec. C. Wachsmuth (Berlin, 1884), 421.

7 Text edited by García Valdés, Llera Fueyo and Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén (n. 5), 251.

8 Translation by A.F. Scholfield, Aelian, On the Characteristics of Animals, Vol. II (Books VI–XI) (London and Cambridge, MA, 1959), 335–7, with slight modifications to fit the text of García Valdés, Llera Fueyo and Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén (n. 5).

9 On the subtle differences between the testimonies see I. Tolić, ‘Four hooves and a horn: how (not) to poison Alexander the Great’, PhilClass 17 (2022), 269–76, at 271.

10 Porph. fr. 6 Castelletti (n. 1), fr. 375F Smith (n. 1), ap. Stob. Flor. 1.49.52.

11 Scholars also date the work of Philon of Heracleia to the early third century b.c.e. On Philon’s date, see K. Ziegler, ‘Paradoxographoi’, RE XVIII.3 (Stuttgart, 1949), 1142–3; J. Bollansée, K. Haegemans and G. Schepens, ‘Philon of Herakleia’, in P.T. Keyser and G.L. Irby-Massie (edd.), Encyclopedia of Ancient Natural Scientists (London and New York, 2008), 657.

12 Given the general agreement between Aelian and Porphyry, scholars have suggested a common source. See Tolić (n. 9), 271. Ael. NA 12.34 mentions a certain Philon, who has been identified as the Philon of Heracleia of Porphyry. The lack of information about his origins or patronymic, however, could indicate that Aelian meant a famous Philon, who did not need further clarification; and this rather points to Philon of Byblos. See A. Giannini, ‘Studi sulla paradossografia greca II. Da Callimaco all’età imperiale: la letteratura paradossografica’, Acme 17 (1964), 99–140, at 118; F.J. Gómez Espelosín, Paradoxógrafos griegos. Rarezas y maravillas (Madrid, 1996), 109. Still, the possibility remains that Aelian and Porphyry had a common source.

13 σχῆμα τό in Aelian. See García Valdés, Llera Fueyo and Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén (n. 5), 251.

14 ἀχράντου in Aelian, agreeing with MSS F and P of Stobaeus. See Wachsmuth (n. 6), 421.

15 Text by A. Belousov, ‘Philon of Herakleia (1676)’, in S. Schorn (ed.), Die Fragmente der Griechischen Historiker Continued, Part IV E.2 (Leiden, 2022), 545–51.

16 Nymphis: FGrHist/BNJ 432; see R.A. Billows, ‘Nymphis (432)’, in I. Worthington (ed.), Brill’s New Jacoby, Part III (Leiden, 2010).

17 Translation by Belousov (n. 15), slightly modified.

18 Trogus Pompeius in Just. Epit. 12.13.7–15; Vitr. 8.3.16; Plin. HN 30.149; Curt. 10.10.14; Paus. 8.17.6–18.6; Plut. Alex. 77. Perhaps we could add the testimony of Arr. Anab. 7.27 about an unspecified ϕάρμακον held inside a mule’s hoof. Not all of these authors give credit to the story they report; most express doubts about it.

19 M. Plezia, ‘Arystoteles trucicielem Aleksandra Wielkiego’, Meander 3 (1948), 492–501; I. Düring, Aristotle in the Ancient Biographical Tradition (Gothenburg, 1957), 297; A.B. Bosworth, ‘The death of Alexander the Great: rumour and propaganda’, CQ 21 (1971), 112–36; A.B. Bosworth, ‘Ptolemy and the will of Alexander’, in A.B. Bosworth and E. Baynham (edd.), Alexander the Great in Fact and Fiction (Oxford, 2000), 207–41; A.B. Bosworth, ‘Alexander’s death: the poisoning rumors’, in J. Romm (ed.), The Landmark Arrian: The Campaigns of Alexander (New York, 2010), 407–10; F. Landucci Gattinoni, ‘La morte di Alessandro e la tradizione su Antipatro’, in M. Sordi (ed.), Alessandro Magno tra storia e mito (Milan, 1984), 91–111; J. Seibert, ‘Das Testament Alexanders: ein Pamphlet aus der Frühzeit der Diadochenkämpfe?’, in A. Kraus (ed.), Land und Reich, Stamm und Nation: Festgabe für Max Spindler (Munich, 1984), 1.247–60; W. Heckel, The Last Days and Testament of Alexander the Great: A Prosopographic Study (Stuttgart, 1988); W. Heckel, ‘The earliest evidence for the plot to poison Alexander’, in W. Heckel, L. Tritle and P.V. Wheatley (edd.), Alexander’s Empire: Formulation to Decay (Claremont, CA, 2007), 265–75; C. Ravazzolo, Incerti auctoris Liber de morte Alexandri Magni (Alessandria, 2012), 17–20; F. Ferraioli, ‘Considerazioni riguardo alla nascita della tradizione sulla morte di Alessandro Magno per avvelenamento’, PP 74 (2019), 133–41, at 135.

20 R. Laqueur, ‘Philon 42’, RE XX.1 (1941), 50–1; Page (n. 4), 436–7; A. Giannini, Paradoxographorum Graecorum Reliquiae (Milan, 1965), 110; Gómez Espelosín (n. 12), 109–10; Castelletti (n. 1), 237–44; Tolić (n. 9).

21 See e.g. Belousov (n. 15), ad loc.; Tolić (n. 9). Castelletti (n. 1), 244 considers it difficult to determine whether both stories refer to the same event or not.

22 Just. 12.14; Diod. Sic. 17.118.1; cf. Curt. 10.10.14: in Alexander’s opinion, Antipater was becoming too powerful. Also the Romance of Alexander (Recensio α, 3.31) and the Liber de morte (87) contain echoes of these disagreements. See also Plezia (n. 19), 496; Landucci Gattinoni (n. 19), 97–8; C.W. Blackwell, In the Absence of Alexander: Harpalus and the Failure of Macedonian Authority (New York, 1999), 156–9; Ravazzolo (n. 19), 49–51; J. Champion, Antigonus the One-Eyed: Greatest of the Successors (Barnsley, 2014), 18; J.D. Grainger, Antipater’s Dynasty: Alexander the Great’s Regent and His Successors (Barnsley, 2019), 49–50. For a nuanced review of Olympias’ role in the problems between Alexander and his generals, see Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 125–6, 136; cf. E. Donnelly Carney, Women and Monarchy in Macedonia (Norman, OK, 2000), 119.

23 On Cassander’s embassy to Babylon, see Blackwell (n. 22), 157–9.

24 Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 113 heeds the potential damaging effects of such rumours in the political climate of the time. Cf. Plezia (n. 19), 498.

25 [Plut.] X orat. 849F ἐψηφίσατο δὲ καὶ τιμὰς Ἰόλᾳ τῷ δο<κοῦ>ντι Ἀλεξάνδρῳ τὸ φάρμακον δοῦναι. The source was probably the third-century b.c.e. biographer Hermippus: J. Bollansée, Hermippos of Smyrna and His Biographical Writings: A Reappraisal (Leuven, 1999), 84–90. J. Roisman, I. Worthington and R. Waterfield, Lives of the Attic Orators: Texts from Pseudo-Plutarch, Photius and the Suda (Oxford, 2015), 258–9 call attention to the parallel story in Plut. Dem. 22.1–2, where Demosthenes offers a public thanksgiving sacrifice to honour Pausanias, the assassin of Philip II. They suggest that Ps.-Plutarch confused Hyperides and Demosthenes, and Alexander and his father. But this theory fails to explain Antipater’s resentment of Hyperides; furthermore, Hyperides’ idea of honouring Iollas could have been inspired precisely by Demosthenes’ honouring of Pausanias.

26 Plut. Dem. 28.4; [Luc.], Demosthenis encomium 31; [Plut.] X orat. 849C. After his mutilation and execution, his body was left unburied. On Antipater’s ‘personal grudge’ against Hyperides, see Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 113.

27 On the early circulation of the story, see Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 113–14; Bosworth (n. 19 [2000]), 207–8; Heckel (n. 19 [1988]), 2; E. Carney, Olympias: Mother of Alexander the Great (New York and London, 2006), 63–4; Ferraioli (n. 19), 137–8. Contra J.R. Hamilton, Plutarch. Alexander: A Commentary (Oxford, 1969), 214 and N.G.L. Hammond, Sources for Alexander the Great: An Analysis of Plutarch’s Life and Arrian’s Anabasis Alexandrou (Cambridge, 1993), 145–8, who suggest a date after 317 b.c.e., in the context of Olympias’ confrontation with Cassander. Cf. Grainger (n. 22), 138. However, this opinion does not offer any convincing explanation of the testimonies about Hyperides. See Ferraioli (n. 19), 137.

28 See Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 113: indeed, we cannot be certain that the original proposal of Hyperides mentioned poison at all. Nevertheless, no alternative story with a different killing method has reached us.

29 See Trogus Pompeius (Just. Epit.) 12.13.7–15 (unspecified substance inside a horse’s hoof), Vitr. 8.3.16 (Styx water inside a mule’s hoof), Plin. HN 30.149 (Styx water inside a she-mule’s hoof), Curt. 10.10.14 (concoction made of Styx water and held inside a hoof), Arr. Anab. 7.27 (unspecified φάρμακον inside a mule’s hoof), Paus. 8.17.6–18.6 (Styx water inside a horse’s hoof), Plut. Alex. 77 (Styx water inside an ass’s hoof).

30 Arr. Anab. 7.27 attests to the circulation of a variety of versions (in Arrian’s opinion untrustworthy). However, the stories he mentions do not contradict each other, but rather offer complementary information. The only extant early Hellenistic account of the king’s death could be the political pamphlet that scholars have suggested to be the inspiration behind the so-called Liber de morte testamentoque Alexandri and the earliest version (Recensio α or Vetusta) of the Romance of Alexander. Neither specifies the poison used, but both describe its container as a πύξις, which seems unsuitable for a liquid. On these texts and their dates see A. Ausfeld, ‘Ueber das angebliche Testament Alexanders des Grossen’, RhM 50 (1895), 357–66; A. Ausfeld, ‘Das angebliche Testament Alexanders des Grossen’, RhM 56 (1901), 517–42; R. Merkelbach, Die Quellen des griechischen Alexanderromans (Munich, 19772), 164–7; Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 115; Heckel (n. 19 [1988]), 1. See E. Baynham, ‘An introduction to the Metz Epitome: its traditions and value’, Antichthon 29 (1995), 60–77, at 62; also Diod. Sic. 17.118, Val. Max. 1.7 (ext.) 2 and Julius Valerius 3.56, all of them without indications about the deadly substance.

31 Mayor (n. 2), 58.

32 On this similarity, Mayor (n. 2), 58.

33 Plut. Alex. 77. Hamilton (n. 27), 214; Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 126; Heckel (n. 19 [1988]), 48–50; Grainger (n. 22), 138.

34 See Diod. Sic. 18.74.3, Strabo 9.1.20. On the designation of Demetrius, E. Will, Histoire politique du monde hellénistique (32330 av. J.-C.) (Paris, 20032), 49–50.

35 See Plezia (n. 19); Bosworth (n. 19 [1971]), 114. On the likely absence of Aristotle from the original story, see Düring (n. 19), 297; Hamilton (n. 27), 214.

36 Theophr. fr. 213B Fortenbaugh (fr. 160 Wimmer) ap. Antigonus, Mir. 158. The paradoxographer obtains his information from Callimachus (fr. 407 Pfeiffer). See also Plin. HN 21.26, fr. 213C Fortenbaugh on the presence of poisonous fish in the spring. Cf. Plin. HN 2.213, which does not mention Theophrastus.

37 R.W. Sharples, Theophrastus of Eresus. Sources for his Life, Writings, Thought and Influence. Commentary, Volume 3.1: Sources on Physics (Leiden, 1998), 201–2. See Arist. Part. an. 663a.

38 See Tolić (n. 9), 274 on the particular uses of κέρας and cornu, respectively, by Longus 2.28 and Cato, Agr. 72, to mean the hard parts of the hoof of cattle. Both instances, however, can be read as metonymic uses of the substantive, rather than proof of the ambiguity of the adjective. Cf. R.W. Sharples, Theophrastus of Eresus. Sources for his Life, Writings, Thought and Influence. Commentary, Volume 5: Sources on Biology (Leiden, 1995), 83–4 on the meaning of the adjective κερασβόλος (Theophr. Caus. pl. 4.12.13; Plut. Mor. 700C), on beans hardened because of contact with horns (or hooves?) of oxen.

39 Tzetz. In Lycophr. Alex. 706 and Σ Opp. Hal. 1.401 agree with the text of Antigonus almost verbatim, without any indication of their source (presumably Theophrastus, perhaps through Callimachus).

40 Theophr. fr. 216 Fortenbaugh ap. Sen. QNat. 3.11.2–5, mentioning the campaign of Cassander around mount Haemus, in Thrace, which took place c. 310 b.c.e.

41 Peripatetic scientific treatises normally are credited to rely on earlier compilations of information, developed by the common effort of the whole school over a long time. On the Peripatetic scientific work method, see A. Gotthelf, Teleology, First Principles, and Scientific Method in Aristotle’s Biology (Oxford, 2012), 383–93.

42 Antigonus’ contribution to spreading the story has to be placed at a time in which any possible alliance between Antigonus and the Antipatrids is ended. This points to a time span after 315 b.c.e., when Antigonus declared Cassander his enemy as a reaction against the execution of Olympias, and before 307 b.c.e., when Demetrius abandoned the political scene of Greece and Macedonia. See Diod. Sic. 18.61.1–3; Will (n. 34), 55. On the alliance between Antigonus and the family of Antipater before that moment, see Will (n. 34), 46–7.

43 H. Berve, Das Alexanderreich aus prosopographischer Grundlage (New York, 1973), 367, s.v. 733. Σώπατρος: ‘unbekannter Abkunft und Heimat’.

44 W. Heckel, Who’s Who in the Age of Alexander the Great: Prosopography of Alexander’s Empire (Malden, MA and Oxford, 2006), 252, s.v. ‘Sopater (Sopatros)’ (‘remotely possible’).

45 The LGPN Online (https://www.lgpn.ox.ac.uk/) reports 242 individuals of this name, 185 in the Hellenistic period, 18 of which are dated to the fourth century b.c.e. Trismegistos People (https://www.trismegistos.org/ref/) reports 49 different individuals bearing this name in Egypt, most of them between the mid-third and mid-second century b.c.e. The Searchable Greek Inscriptions of the Packard Humanities Institute (https://inscriptions.packhum.org/) features 392 texts referring to persons of this name.

46 The Real-Encyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft lists 16 entries entitled ‘Sopatros’.

47 On this author, see A. Körte, ‘Sopatros 9’, RE III.A (1927), 1.1001–2; K.–A. 1.275–87.

48 Ath. Deipn. 2.84. See Sopater in K.–A., vol. 1.

49 Giannini (n. 20), 110.

50 Sharples (n. 37), 201.

51 See C. Jacob, ‘De l’art de compiler à la fabrication du merveilleux: sur la paradoxographie grecque’, Lalies 2 (1983), 121–40, at 122; G. Schepens, ‘Ancient paradoxography: origin, evolution, production and reception. Part I. The Hellenistic period’, in O. Pecere and A. Stramaglia (edd.), La letteratura di consumo nel mondo greco-latino (Cassino, 1996), 376–409, at 389–90.

52 Perhaps somehow connected to the work of Nymphis?

53 On the working method of the paradoxographers, see Jacob (n. 51), 129–35.

54 Page (n. 4), 436; Tolić (n. 9).

55 Tolić (n. 9), 269, 274.

56 On the Liber de morte and the Alexander Romance as the only possible exceptions, see above (n. 30).

57 See Hdt. 4.28, 129; cf. Arist. Hist. an. 605a15–20, 606a26, Gen. an. 748a25. Cf. Strabo 7.3.18.

58 The Libyan horned asses of Herodotus are likely related to the same tradition of the Indian ass. He also mentions the dog-headed men (κυνοκέφαλοι) and people without head (ἀκέφαλοι), which other sources (including Ctesias) placed in India. See K. Karttunen, India in Early Greek Literature (Helsinki, 1989), 128–31, on the possibility that Herodotus followed Hecataeus. On the transference of Indian marvels to Libya in the early logographers, see ibid., 68, 134–8; for a fresh revision of this ‘confusion’, see P. Schneider, ‘The so-called confusion between India and Ethiopia: the eastern and southern edges of the inhabited world from the Greco-Roman perspective’, in S. Bianchetti, M. Cataudella and H.-J. Gehrke (edd.), Brill’s Companion to Ancient Geography: The Inhabited World in Greek and Roman Tradition (Leiden, 2015), 184–202.

59 FGrHist 688 F 45.45 (ap. Phot. Bibl. 72.48b).

60 Lit. ‘horn’, without any numerical indication. See P. Li Causi, ‘L’asino indiano da Ctesia ad Aristotele: i primi passi dell’unicorno nel mondo della “realtà”’, ClassicoContemporaneo 5 (2019), 19–51, at 22–3, 40–2 on the ambiguity of Ctesias’ testimony regarding the number of horns possessed by the Indian ass. Nothing indicates clearly that it had just one horn; it was rather later authors, in particular Aristotle, who developed the idea of the ‘unicorn’. On a similar ambiguity regarding the Scythian ass, see Tolić (n. 9), 272.

61 Translation by A.G. Nichols, Ctesias, On India: Translation and Commentary (London, 2011), 56, with slight modifications.

62 Aristophanes of Byzantium, Historiae Animalium Epitome and Timotheus of Gaza, Περὶ Ζῴων are both cited from S.P. Lambros, Historiae Animalium Epitome subiunctis Aeliani Timothei aliorumque eclogis (Supplementum Aristotelicum 1/1; Berlin 1885).

63 On the healing virtues of the rhinoceros’ horn in Asian cultures, see Karttunen (n. 58), 168–9; Nichols (n. 61), 132. On vessels made of rhinoceros’ horn, Karttunen (n. 58), 170.

64 On this exclusive possession, see Philostr. V A 3.2; Timotheus Epit. 31.14. The Physiologus also establishes a connection between the unicorn and the royal palace.

65 Page (n. 4), 436.

66 The text says nothing about where the horn was presented to Alexander: was it in Babylon? In that case, how did it arrive in Delphi? However, these geographical questions lose their importance if the story is an invention serving political propaganda.

67 The Lindian Chronicle is a paradigmatic example. See C. Higbie, The Lindian Chronicle and the Greek Creation of their Past (Oxford, 2003); J. Shaya, ‘The Greek temple as museum: the case of the legendary treasure of Athena from Lindos’, AJA 109 (2005), 423–42; A. Kirk, ‘Σήματα νίκης: inscribed objects in the Lindian Chronicle’, Dossier: Place aux objets! Présentification et vie des artefacts en Grèce ancienne, Mètis 16 (2018), 107–24.

68 On this distinction, see B. Brown, ‘Thing theory’, Critical Inquiry 28 (2001), 1–22, especially 4.

69 See Kirk (n. 67) on inscribed objects mentioned in the Lindian Chronicle.

70 On Cassander’s presence in Delphi years after the death of Alexander, see Plut. Alex. 75.