{"database": "deitydb", "table": "entity_sources", "is_view": false, "human_description_en": "where source_id = \"SRC_OVID_FASTI\"", "rows": [["ENT_ITA_CARMENTA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 1.461-586: Carmentalia, Carmenta's role in childbirth, the Arcadian migration, and Evander."], ["ENT_ITA_FAUNUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 2.267-380: Faunus and the Lupercalia festival; 2.193-474; 5.99-102."], ["ENT_ITA_FLORA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 5.183-378: Floralia, the Chloris/Flora narrative, and Flora's claims to mythological agency (Mars, Hyacinthus)."], ["ENT_ITA_OPS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 6.303-304 (Opalia); Macrobius Saturnalia 1.10.19-20 (Ops and Consus)."], ["ENT_ITA_PICUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 3.37-54: Picus as Picus Martius (woodpecker sacred to Mars)."], ["ENT_ROM_ANNA_PERENNA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_APOLLO", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 3.881 (Agonalia): Apollo referenced in the Roman calendar; the Ludi Apollinares (July, outside the surviving six books); Ovid treats Apollo as the preserver of the Roman state who deflected plague; his role in the Julian-Augustan ideology"], ["ENT_ROM_BACCHUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 3.713-790: the Liberalia (March 17; festival of Liber/Bacchus); the coming-of-age ceremony where Roman boys put on their toga virilis; Liber/Bacchus as the deity of wine, freedom, and civic coming-of-age; the primary literary account of the Liberalia"], ["ENT_ROM_CARNA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_CERES", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 4.393-620: the Cerealia (April 12-19); Ovid narrates the Rape of Proserpina in the Roman version (Ceres searches for her daughter; the institution of her cult); the primary Latin literary account of the Ceres/Proserpina myth"], ["ENT_ROM_CONCORDIA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Ovid, Fasti 1.637-650; 3.881-882: the temple of Concordia in the Forum."], ["ENT_ROM_DIANA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 2.155-192 (Lupercalia passage), 3.263-274: Diana's rites on the Ides of March; her grove at Aricia (Nemi) referenced; her role as goddess of wild places and the moon; Fasti 3.263-274 describes the founding of her Arician cult"], ["ENT_ROM_FORTUNA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Ovid, Fasti 6.569-636: the temple and rites of Fortuna (Fors Fortuna)."], ["ENT_ROM_GENIUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti throughout: the Genius of the paterfamilias is referenced in Roman cult practice; the Genius Augusti (August's divine spirit) is a political-religious figure Ovid navigates carefully; the Genius is the divine life-force of a person or place in Roman religion"], ["ENT_ROM_JANUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 1.89-294: Janus is Ovid's primary subject for January; the god speaks at length about his two-faced nature, his guardianship of gates and beginnings, and his role as the first deity of any invocation; the most extensive literary account of Janus's theology"], ["ENT_ROM_JUNO", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 6.15-182: June is sacred to Juno; she speaks in the poem; the Matronalia (March 1 in a different book) and June festivals; her role as queen of heaven and protector of Roman matrons; the Junonian calendar of June"], ["ENT_ROM_JUPITER", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti throughout: Jupiter is invoked and addressed in multiple calendar entries; his Ides (the 13th of each month are sacred to him); the Vinalia, Agonalia, and other festivals connected to Jupiter; his role as sky-father and state deity"], ["ENT_ROM_LARES", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 2.599-616: the Fornacalia and Compitalia; the Lares Compitales (Lares of the crossroads) and the household Lares; Ovid explains the origin of the Lares and their role protecting the home and the crossroads; a key text for Roman domestic religion"], ["ENT_ROM_MANES", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 2.533-616: the Parentalia (February 13-21) \u2014 the feast of the dead when the Manes (ancestral spirits) are propitiated; Ovid describes the ritual: cold offerings at the tomb, violets, and wine; the Feralia (February 21) closes the festival; primary literary account of Roman ancestor cult"], ["ENT_ROM_MARS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 2.857-862, 3.1-166: February Lupercalia involves Mars; March is his month; Ovid narrates his origin, his rape of Silvia (mother of Romulus and Remus), and the rites of the Salii; primary literary account of the Roman Mars's cult mythology"], ["ENT_ROM_MERCURY", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 5.663-692: the Mercuralia (May 15); Mercury's origin as son of Maia (May's eponymous figure); his role as god of merchants and travellers; the ritual sprinkling of his waters at the Porta Capena fountain"], ["ENT_ROM_MINERVA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 3.809-848: the Quinquatrus (March 19-23) as Minerva's principal festival; Ovid narrates the origin of the festival and the ritual contests of gladiators; Minerva as patroness of crafts, arts, and learning; the second most important Capitoline deity after Jupiter"], ["ENT_ROM_NEPTUNE", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 1.693-696: the Neptunalia is listed (July, not in the surviving six books, but Neptune is referenced); Ovid mentions Neptune in the context of sea power and his role alongside Jupiter and Pluto as the three cosmic rulers"], ["ENT_ROM_PALES", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_PAX", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Ovid, Fasti 1.709-722: Pax and the Ara Pacis Augustae."], ["ENT_ROM_PENATES", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 6.454: Vesta and the Penates are explicitly linked; Ovid treats the Penates as the guardian deities of the Roman state's inner sanctuary (the Atrium Vestae) as well as household gods brought from Troy by Aeneas; primary literary source for their cult"], ["ENT_ROM_PLUTO", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 4.417-620: Pluto (Dis Pater) abducts Proserpina in Ovid's Roman account; the Parentalia and Lemuria involve propitiation of his realm; Fasti 4.445 names Pluto explicitly in the abduction scene"], ["ENT_ROM_PROSERPINA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 4.417-620: Proserpina's abduction by Pluto (Roman version of the Persephone myth); Ceres's search; the negotiated return; the primary Latin literary source alongside Ovid's Metamorphoses"], ["ENT_ROM_QUIRINUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 2.475-512: the Quirinalia (February 17); Romulus's deification as Quirinus; Ovid narrates the apotheosis of Romulus, who becomes Quirinus the civic god; the primary literary account of this deification myth"], ["ENT_ROM_ROBIGUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_SATURN", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 1.233-254: Saturn's reign in the Golden Age; his arrival in Latium as a wanderer; the Saturnalia aetiologies are discussed in Macrobius (linked to Fasti tradition); Ovid treats Saturn as the archaic deity of the agricultural Golden Age"], ["ENT_ROM_SEMO_SANCUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_SUMMANUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_TELLUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Ovid, Fasti 1.671-674; 4.629-672: Tellus Mater and the Fordicidia."], ["ENT_ROM_VACUNA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_VEIOVIS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Attested in Ovid's Fasti (festival calendar)."], ["ENT_ROM_VENUS", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 4.1-18, 4.61-244: April is sacred to Venus; Ovid addresses her and narrates the festivals of Veneralia and Vinalia; the origin of April from aperire (to open) is connected to her power; her role as mother of Aeneas and ancestor of the Julian family"], ["ENT_ROM_VESTA", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 6.249-460: the Vestalia (June 7-15); the most important surviving ancient account of the Vesta cult; the Penates, the sacred flame, the ritual prohibition on donkeys during the festival; Ovid connects Vesta to the earth and to the primordial fire"], ["ENT_ROM_VULCAN", "SRC_OVID_FASTI", "direct attestation", "Fasti 3.831 (Quinquatrus): Vulcan as the divine craftsman associated with fire and metallurgy; the Volcanalia (August 23, outside the surviving six books) is the primary Roman fire festival; Vulcan's role as the forge-deity contrasted with his Greek counterpart Hephaestus's lame-craftsman mythology"]], "truncated": false, "filtered_table_rows_count": 39, "expanded_columns": [], "expandable_columns": [[{"column": "source_id", "other_table": "sources", "other_column": "source_id"}, "title"], [{"column": "entity_id", "other_table": "entities", "other_column": "entity_id"}, "canonical_name"]], "columns": ["entity_id", "source_id", "evidence_type", "source_note"], "primary_keys": ["entity_id", "source_id", "evidence_type"], "units": {}, "query": {"sql": "select entity_id, source_id, evidence_type, source_note from entity_sources where \"source_id\" = :p0 order by entity_id, source_id, evidence_type limit 101", "params": {"p0": "SRC_OVID_FASTI"}}, "facet_results": {}, "suggested_facets": [], "next": null, "next_url": null, "private": false, "allow_execute_sql": true, "query_ms": 400.9978809999666, "source": "jebboone/deitydb", "source_url": "https://github.com/jebboone/deitydb", "license": "MIT", "license_url": "https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT"}