cup-bearer

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A cup-bearer was historically an officer of high rank in royal courts, whose duty was to pour and serve the drinks at the royal table. On account of the constant fear of plots and intrigues (such as poisoning), a person had to be regarded as thoroughly trustworthy to hold the position. He would guard against poison in the king's cup, and was sometimes required to swallow some of the drink before serving it. His confidential relations with the king often gave him a position of great influence. The cup-bearer as an honorific role, for example as the Egyptian hieroglyph for "cup-bearer", was used as late as 196 BC in the Rosetta Stone for the Kanephoros cup-bearer Areia, daughter of Diogenes; each Ptolemaic Decree starting with the Decree of Canopus honored a cup-bearer. A much older role ...

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File:Banquet cup-bearer Louvre G467.jpg
Banquet cup-bearer Louvre G467.jpg
Boy serving wine in a banquet, holding an oenochoe (wine jug) in his right hand and a kylix (shallow...
File:Ganymede Waters Zeus as an Eagle by Thorvaldsen.jpg
Ganymede Waters Zeus as an Eagle by Thorvaldsen.jpg
Ganymede Waters Zeus as an Eagle by Bertel Thorvaldsen. Located in the Thorvaldsen Museum, Copenhage...
File:Neemias apresenta píxide a Artaxerxes (Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal ALC.455, fl.147), cropped.png
Neemias apresenta píxide a Artaxerxes (Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal ALC.455, fl.147), cropped.png
Nehemiah presenting King Artaxerxes with a pyxis, miniature from the Bible of the Monastery of Santa...

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