entity_citations: CIT_NOR_AESIR_POETIC
This data as json
| citation_id | entity_id | source_id | work_title | locus | quote | translator | translation_year | source_url | evidence_grade | evidence_note | verified_on | verify_method | display_order | needs_review | review_reason | original_text_url |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CIT_NOR_AESIR_POETIC | ENT_NOR_AESIR | SRC_POETIC_EDDA | The Poetic Edda | The Poetic Edda | His wife is Frigga, the daughter of Fjorgyn, and they and their offspring form the race that we call Aesir, a race that dwells in Asgard the old, and the regions around it, and that we know to be entirely divine. Wherefore Odin may justly be called All-father, for he is verily the father of all, of gods as well as of men, and to his power all things owe their existence. | Benjamin Thorpe | 1866 | https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14726 | primary-verbatim | 2026-06-18 | name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation | 1 | 1 | English translation (Benjamin Thorpe, in the Norroena ed. Gutenberg #14726) located by name within the work (not exact stanza); verify locus. |