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Ἡφαίστου . . . ἱρόν. For this temple cf. ii. 101. 2 n.

For the Πατάϊκοι and the Κάβειροι cf. ii. 51 n. The name of the Πατάϊκοι was perhaps connected with that of Ptah, but this is most uncertain (cf. Roscher, iii. 1676). They were fat dwarfs with gorgon like features; cf. Perrot and Chipiez, iii, fig. 21, p. 65. Aesch. in Ctes. 190 uses Παταικίων = a trickster. H. here confuses the image of Ptah (Hephaestus) with those of the Khnoumou, ‘the sons of Ptah’; these were dwarfs, with bent legs, long arms, and a huge head. Ptah himself was represented as a mummy, with head and hands free.

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    • Aeschines, Against Ctesiphon, 190
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