✦ DeityDB
Browse Graph Connections Timeline Lineages Path Map Queries About Collaborate API GitHub ↗

entity_citations

Data license: MIT · Data source: jebboone/deitydb

30 rows where source_id = "SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS"

✎ View and edit SQL

This data as json, CSV (advanced)

Suggested facets: work_title, locus, quote, source_url, verify_method, verified_on (date)

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_APOLLO_HH3 Apollo ENT_APOLLO Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 3 (To Apollo) lines 1-4 I will remember and not be unmindful of Apollo who shoots afar. As he goes through the house of Zeus, the gods tremble before him and all spring up from their seats when he draws near, as he bends his bright bow. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Hesiod,_the_Homeric_Hymns_and_Homerica/Hymn_III_(To_Apollo) primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 verbatim web-retrieval from public-domain Loeb edition (Wikisource) 1 0    
CIT_ASCLEPIUS_HERO_HH Asclepius Hero ENT_ASCLEPIUS_HERO Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 16 lines 1-4 I begin to sing of Asclepius, son of Apollo and healer of sicknesses. In the Dotian plain fair Coronis, daughter of King Phlegyas, bare him, a great joy to men, a soother of cruel pangs. (l. 5) And so hail to you, lord: in my song I make my prayer to thee! Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_ASCLEPIUS_HH Asclepius ENT_ASCLEPIUS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 16 lines 1-4 I begin to sing of Asclepius, son of Apollo and healer of sicknesses. In the Dotian plain fair Coronis, daughter of King Phlegyas, bare him, a great joy to men, a soother of cruel pangs. (l. 5) And so hail to you, lord: in my song I make my prayer to thee! Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_AURAE_HH Aurae ENT_AURAE Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_CORYCIAN_NYMPHS_HH Corycian Nymphs ENT_CORYCIAN_NYMPHS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_CRENAIAE_HH Crenaiae ENT_CRENAIAE Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_DEMETER_HH2 Demeter ENT_DEMETER Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 2 (To Demeter) lines 1-3 I begin to sing of rich-haired Demeter, awful goddess--of her and her trim-ankled daughter whom Aidoneus rapt away, given to him by all-seeing Zeus the loud-thunderer. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Hesiod,_the_Homeric_Hymns_and_Homerica/Hymn_II_(To_Demeter) primary-verbatim The hymn is the foundational narrative of the Eleusinian Mysteries; this opening states the rape of Persephone. 2026-06-17 verbatim web-retrieval from public-domain Loeb edition (Wikisource) 1 0    
CIT_DIONYSUS_HH7 Dionysus ENT_DIONYSUS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 7 (To Dionysus) lines 1-6 I will tell of Dionysus, the son of glorious Semele, how he appeared on a jutting headland by the shore of the fruitless sea, seeming like a stripling in the first flush of manhood: his rich, dark hair was waving about him, and on his strong shoulders he wore a purple robe. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Hesiod,_the_Homeric_Hymns_and_Homerica/Hymn_VII_(To_Dionysus) primary-verbatim The hymn relates Dionysus' capture by Tyrsenian pirates and his epiphany — an early witness to his power over mortals at sea. 2026-06-17 verbatim web-retrieval from public-domain Loeb edition (Wikisource) 1 0    
CIT_DIOSCURI_HH Dioscuri ENT_DIOSCURI Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 33 lines 294-303 So there came suddenly warriors with mailed backs and curving claws, crooked beasts that walked sideways, nut-cracker-jawed, shell-hided: bony they were, flat-backed, with glistening shoulders and bandy legs and stretching arms and eyes that looked behind them. They had also eight legs and two feelers-persistent creatures who are called crabs. These nipped off the tails and paws and feet of the Mice with their jaws, while spears only beat on them. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_DRYADS_HH Dryads ENT_DRYADS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_HAMADRYADS_HH Hamadryads ENT_HAMADRYADS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_HELEIONOMAI_HH Heleionomai ENT_HELEIONOMAI Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_HERACLES_HH Heracles ENT_HERACLES Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 15 lines 1-8 I will sing of Heracles, the son of Zeus and much the mightiest of men on earth. Alcmena bare him in Thebes, the city of lovely dances, when the dark-clouded Son of Cronos had lain with her. Once he used to wander over unmeasured tracts of land and sea at the bidding of King Eurystheus, and himself did many deeds of violence and endured many; but now he lives happily in the glorious home of snowy Olympus, and has neat-ankled Hebe for his wife. (l. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_KOUROTROPHOS_HH Kourotrophos ENT_KOUROTROPHOS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 30 lines 1-16 I will sing of well-founded Earth, mother of all, eldest of all beings. She feeds all creatures that are in the world, all that go upon the goodly land, and all that are in the paths of the seas, and all that fly: all these are fed of her store. Through you, O queen, men are blessed in their children and blessed in their harvests, and to you it belongs to give means of life to mortal men and to take it away. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_LEIMAKIDES_HH Leimakides ENT_LEIMAKIDES Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_LIMNADES_HH Limnades ENT_LIMNADES Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_NAIADS_HH Naiads ENT_NAIADS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_NAPAEAE_HH Napaeae ENT_NAPAEAE Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_NEPHELAE_HH Nephelae ENT_NEPHELAE Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_NYMPHS_HH Nymphs ENT_NYMPHS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_OREADS_HH Oreads ENT_OREADS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_PAN_HH Pan ENT_PAN Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_PEGAEAE_HH Pegaeae ENT_PEGAEAE Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_PLOUTON_HH Plouton ENT_PLOUTON Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 18 lines 1-9 I sing of Cyllenian Hermes, the Slayer of Argus, lord of Cyllene and Arcadia rich in flocks, luck-bringing messenger of the deathless gods. He was born of Maia, the daughter of Atlas, when she had made with Zeus,-a shy goddess she. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_POTAMEIDES_HH Potameides ENT_POTAMEIDES Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 19 lines 1-26 Muse, tell me about Pan, the dear son of Hermes, with his goat's feet and two horns-a lover of merry noise. Through wooded glades he wanders with dancing nymphs who foot it on some sheer cliff's edge, calling upon Pan, the shepherd-god, long-haired, unkempt. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_PYTHON_HH Python ENT_PYTHON Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 3 lines 300-310 But near by was a sweet flowing spring, and there with his strong bow the lord, the son of Zeus, killed the bloated, great she-dragon, a fierce monster wont to do great mischief to men upon earth, to men themselves and to their thin-shanked sheep; for she was a very bloody plague. She it was who once received from gold-throned Hera and brought up fell, cruel Typhaon to be a plague to men. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_SILENUS_HH Silenus ENT_SILENUS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 5 lines 247-290 'And now because of you I shall have great shame among the deathless gods henceforth, continually. For until now they feared my jibes and the wiles by which, or soon or late, I mated all the immortals with mortal women, making them all subject to my will. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_TITHONUS_HH Tithonus ENT_TITHONUS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 5 lines 218-238 'So also golden-throned Eos rapt away Tithonus who was of your race and like the deathless gods. And she went to ask the dark-clouded Son of Cronos that he should be deathless and live eternally; and Zeus bowed his head to her prayer and fulfilled her desire. Too simply was queenly Eos: she thought not in her heart to ask youth for him and to strip him of the slough of deadly age. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_TRIPTOLEMUS_HH Triptolemus ENT_TRIPTOLEMUS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 2 lines 1-3 I begin to sing of rich-haired Demeter, awful goddess-of her and her trim-ankled daughter whom Aidoneus rapt away, given to him by all-seeing Zeus the loud-thunderer. Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/348 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 deterministic verbatim extraction + substring gate (Gutenberg #348) 1 0    
CIT_ZEUS_HH23 Zeus ENT_ZEUS Homeric Hymns (7th-5th century BCE); trans. M.L. West, Homeric Hymns (Loeb Classical Library 496, Harvard 2003) SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS Homeric Hymn 23 (To Zeus) lines 1-4 I will sing of Zeus, chiefest among the gods and greatest, all-seeing, the lord of all, the fulfiller who whispers words of wisdom to Themis as she sits leaning towards him. Be gracious, all-seeing Son of Cronos, most excellent and great! Hugh G. Evelyn-White 1914 https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Hesiod,_the_Homeric_Hymns_and_Homerica/Hymn_XXIII_(To_Zeus) primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 verbatim web-retrieval from public-domain Loeb edition (Wikisource) 1 0    

Advanced export

JSON shape: default, array, newline-delimited, object

CSV options:

CREATE TABLE "entity_citations" (
   [citation_id] TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
   [entity_id] TEXT REFERENCES [entities]([entity_id]),
   [source_id] TEXT REFERENCES [sources]([source_id]),
   [work_title] TEXT,
   [locus] TEXT,
   [quote] TEXT,
   [translator] TEXT,
   [translation_year] INTEGER,
   [source_url] TEXT,
   [evidence_grade] TEXT,
   [evidence_note] TEXT,
   [verified_on] TEXT,
   [verify_method] TEXT,
   [display_order] INTEGER,
   [needs_review] INTEGER,
   [review_reason] TEXT,
   [original_text_url] TEXT
);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_citations_source_id]
    ON [entity_citations] ([source_id]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_citations_entity_id]
    ON [entity_citations] ([entity_id]);
Powered by Datasette · Queries took 24.57ms · Data license: MIT · Data source: jebboone/deitydb