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42 rows where source_id = "SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION"

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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_ACHILLES_PAUS Achilles ENT_ACHILLES Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 6, ch. 23.3 There is no altar to Achilles, but he has a cenotaph in accordance with an oracle. And at the commencement of the general festival on a given day, when the sun begins to set, the women of Elis among other rites in honour of Achilles are wont to wail and strike the breast. And there is another enclosure, smaller than the gymnasium but adjacent to it, which they call from its shape the Square. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_ADIKIA_PAUSAN Adikia ENT_ADIKIA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece And there is a comely woman dragging along an ugly one, with one hand holding her fast, and with the other beating her with a rod, this is Justice punishing Injustice. And there are two women pounding with pestles into mortars, apparently compounding drugs, but there is no inscription in reference to them. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_AGANIPPE_PAUS Aganippe ENT_AGANIPPE Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 29.5 And at Helicon, on the left as you go to the grove of the Muses, is the fountain Aganippe. Aganippe was they say the daughter of Termesus, the river which flows round Helicon, and, if you go straight for the grove, you will come to an image of Eupheme carved in stone. She is said to have been the nurse of the Muses. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_AJAX_PAUS Ajax ENT_AJAX Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 35.3 The name Salamis was they say originally given to this island from Salamis the mother of Asopus, and afterwards the Aeginetans under Telamon inhabited the island: and Philaeus, the son of Eurysaces and grandson of Ajax, became an Athenian and handed it over to Athens. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_AMPHIARAUS_PAUS Amphiaraus ENT_AMPHIARAUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 34 The city is near the sea and has played no great part in history: about 12 stades from it is the temple of Amphiaraus. And it is said that, when Amphiaraus fled from Thebes, the earth opened and swallowed up him and his chariot: but it did not they say happen here but at a place called Harma (_Chariot_), on the way from Thebes to Chalcis. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_ANYTUS_PAUS Anytus ENT_ANYTUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 8, ch. 37.5 And on the other side of the throne near Despœna stands Anytus in armour: they say Despœna was brought up near the temple by him. He was one of the Titans. Homer first introduced the Titans into poetry, as gods in what is called Tartarus, in the lines about the oath of Hera. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_AUXO_PAUS Auxo ENT_AUXO Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 35.1 These names suit the Graces, and they have suitable names also among the Athenians, for the Athenians honour of old the Graces Auxo and Hegemone. As to Carpo it is not the name of a Grace but a Season. And another Season the Athenians honour equally with Pandrosus, the Goddess they call Thallo. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_CAERUS_PAUSAN Caerus ENT_CAERUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece And there are two altars very near the entrance to the race-course, one they say of Hermes the Athlete, and the other of Opportunity. Ion the Chian has I know written an Hymn to Opportunity, in which he traces his genealogy, and makes him the youngest son of Zeus. And near the treasure of the Sicyonians is an altar of Hercules, either one of the Curetes, or the son of Alcmena, for both traditions are current. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_CARPO_PAUS Carpo ENT_CARPO Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 35.1 As to Carpo it is not the name of a Grace but a Season. And another Season the Athenians honour equally with Pandrosus, the Goddess they call Thallo. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_CORYCIA_SEC Corycia ENT_CORYCIA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) per cited source         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_DACTYLS_PAUSAN Dactyls ENT_DACTYLS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece den age: and that, when Zeus was born, Rhea entrusted the charge of the boy to the Idaean Dactyli, who were otherwise called the Curetes: who afterwards came to Elis from Ida in Crete, and their names were Hercules, and Epimedes, and Paeonaeus, and Iasius, and Idas. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_DESPOINA_SEC Despoina ENT_DESPOINA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) Pausanias 8.37:         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_DIRCE_SEC Dirce ENT_DIRCE Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) per cited source         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_ELEOS_SEC Eleos ENT_ELEOS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) Pausanias 1.17.1:         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_EPHYRA_PAUSAN Ephyra ENT_EPHYRA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece But Eumœlus' account is that the Sun gave Asopia to Aloeus, and Ephyraea to Aeetes: and Aeetes went to Colchis, and left the kingdom to Bunus the son of Hermes and Alcidamea, and after Bunus' death, Epopeus reigned over the Ephyraeans. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_EPIONE_PAUS Epione ENT_EPIONE Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 2, ch. 29.1 There is a temple of Aesculapius, and statues of Aesculapius and Epione, who they say was his wife. These are in the open air, and are of Parian marble. And there are temples of Dionysus and Artemis, the latter as a Huntress. There is a temple also built to Aphrodite: and near the harbour on the cliff jutting out into the sea is they say one of Hera. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_EURYNOMOS_SEC Eurynomos ENT_EURYNOMOS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) Pausanias 10.28.7:         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_HADES_KLYMENOS_PAUSAN Hades Klymenos ENT_HADES_KLYMENOS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece And I fancy that Homer, having seen these, ventured to introduce them in his account of the rivers of Hades, and to borrow his names from these rivers in Thesprotia. However that may be, Theseus being detained there, the sons of Tyndarus led an expedition to Aphidna, and captured it, and restored Menestheus to the kingdom. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_HIPPOLYTUS_PAUS Hippolytus ENT_HIPPOLYTUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 2, ch. 32.1 And Hippolytus the son of Theseus has precincts and a temple in them and ancient statue. Diomede they say erected all these, and was the first to sacrifice to Hippolytus: and the people of Trœzen have a priest of Hippolytus who serves for life, and they have yearly sacrifices, and the following custom. Every maiden cuts off a lock of her hair before marriage, and takes it and offers it at this temple. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_HYGIEIA_PAUSAN Hygieia ENT_HYGIEIA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece And next to Diitrephes, (I shall not mention the more obscure images), are some statues of goddesses, as Hygiea, (_Health_), who they say was the daughter of Aesculapius, and Athene by the same name of Hygiea. And there is a small stone such as a little man can sit on, on which they say Silenus rested, when Dionysus came to the land. Silenus is the name they give to all old Satyrs. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_IASO_SEC Iaso ENT_IASO Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) Pausanias 1.34.3:         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_IPHIGENIA_PAUSAN Iphigenia ENT_IPHIGENIA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece And not far from Marathon is Brauron, where they say Iphigenia, the daughter of Agamemnon, landed in her flight from the Tauri, bringing with her the statue of Artemis, and, having left it here, went on to Athens and afterwards to Argos. Here is indeed an ancient statue of Artemis. But those who have the Tauric statue of the goddess in my opinion, I shall show in another part of my work. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_KORE_PAUSAN Kore ENT_KORE Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece The story goes then that when Demeter came to Argos Pelasgus received her into his house, and that Chrysanthis, knowing of the rape of Proserpine, informed her of it: and afterwards Trochilus the initiating priest fled they say from Argos in consequence of the hatred of Agenor, and came to Attica, and there married a wife from Eleusis, and had children by her, Eubules and Triptolemus. This is the account of the Argives. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_LINUS_PAUS Linus ENT_LINUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 29.6 And next to her is a statue of Linus, on a small rock carved like a cavern, to whom every year they perform funeral rites before they sacrifice to the Muses. It is said that Linus was the son of Urania by Amphiaraus the son of Poseidon, and that he had greater fame for musical skill than either his contemporaries or predecessors, and that Apollo slew him because he boasted himself as equal to the god. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_MANIA_PAUS Mania ENT_MANIA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 8, ch. 34.1 They call both goddesses and place Maniae, which is I fancy a title of the Eumenides, for they say Orestes was driven mad here after the murder of his mother. And not far from the temple is a small mound, with a stone finger upon it, the mound is called Finger's tomb, because here they say Orestes in his madness gnawed off one of his fingers. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_MANTO_PAUS Manto ENT_MANTO Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 33.2 They say also that Manto the daughter of Tiresias was offered to Apollo by the Argives, but that, in consequence of the orders of the god, she sailed to what is now Ionia, and to that part of it called Colophonia. And there she married the Cretan Rhacius. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_NEDA_SEC Neda ENT_NEDA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) per cited source         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_ORPHEUS_PAUS Orpheus ENT_ORPHEUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 30.5 There is also a statue of Thracian Orpheus with Telete beside him, and there are round him representations in stone and brass of the animals listening to his singing. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_PALAEMON_PAUS Palaemon ENT_PALAEMON Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 2, ch. 1.3 And Amphitrite and Poseidon are standing in a chariot, and their son Palaemon is seated bolt upright on the dolphin's back: and these are made of ivory and gold. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_PANACEA_PAUS Panacea ENT_PANACEA Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 34.3 And the fourth division of the altar belongs to Aphrodite and Panacea, and also to Jason and Hygiea and Paeonian Athene. And the fifth has been set apart for the Nymphs and Pan, and the rivers Achelous and Cephisus. And Amphilochus has also an altar at Athens, and at Mallus in Cilicia an oracle most veracious even in my day. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_PELOPS_PAUS Pelops ENT_PELOPS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 5, ch. 13.1 And within Altis there is a separate grove to Pelops: who of the heroes at Olympia is as much held in the highest honour as Zeus is among the gods. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_PRAXIS_PAUSAN Praxis ENT_PRAXIS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Pausanias, Description of Greece And next to the temple of Dionysus is the shrine of Aphrodite, and a statue of the goddess in ivory, under the title Praxis (_Action_). This is the oldest statue in the shrine. And _Persuasion_ and another goddess whom they call _Consolation_ are by Praxiteles: and by Scopas _Love_ and _Desire_ and _Yearning_, each statue expressing the particular shade of meaning marked by the words. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-18 name-anchored (note-keyword scored) + substring gate; locus per attestation 1 1 English translation (A. R. Shilleto, Bohn ed., Gutenberg #68946/#68680) located by name; verify book.chapter. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0159
CIT_PRIAPUS_PAUS Priapus ENT_PRIAPUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 31.2 There is also a doe suckling Telephus the son of Hercules, and a cow, and a statue of Priapus well worth seeing. Priapus is honoured especially where there are flocks of sheep or goats, or swarms of bees. And the people of Lampsacus honour him more than all the gods, and say that he is the son of Dionysus and Aphrodite. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_PROTESILAUS_PAUS Protesilaus ENT_PROTESILAUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 34.2 I can mention others who were once men, who have honours paid to them as gods, and cities dedicated to them, as Eleus in the Chersonese to Protesilaus, and Lebadea in Bœotia to Trophonius: so Amphiaraus has a temple at Oropus, and a statue in white stone. And the altar has five divisions: one belongs to Hercules and Zeus and Paeonian Apollo, and another is dedicated to heroes and heroes' wives. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_SIBYL_PAUS Sibyl ENT_SIBYL Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 10, ch. 12 There is a projecting stone above, on which the Delphians say the first Herophile, also called the Sibyl, chanted her oracles. I found her to be most ancient, and the Greeks say she was the daughter of Zeus by Lamia the daughter of Poseidon, and that she was the first woman who chanted oracles, and that she was called Sibyl by the Libyans. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_TELESPHORUS_PAUS Telesphorus ENT_TELESPHORUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 2, ch. 11.7 And (if my conjecture is correct) this Euamerion is called Telesphorus (according to some oracle) by the people of Pergamum, but by the people of Epidaurus Acesis. There is also a wooden statue of Coronis, but not anywhere in the temple: but when bull or lamb or pig are sacrificed to the goddess, then they take Coronis to the temple of Athene and honour her there. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_THALLO_PAUS Thallo ENT_THALLO Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 35.1 And another Season the Athenians honour equally with Pandrosus, the Goddess they call Thallo. But having learnt so to do from Eteocles of Orchomenus we are accustomed now to pray to three Graces: and Angelion and Tectaeus who made a statue of Apollo at Delos have placed three Graces in his hand; and at Athens at the entrance to the Acropolis there are also three Graces, and near them they celebrate the mysteries whic A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_THESEUS_PAUS Theseus ENT_THESEUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 17.2 And near the gymnasium is a temple of Theseus, where are paintings of the Athenians fighting against the Amazons. And this war has also been represented on the shield of Athene, and on the base of Olympian Zeus. And in the temple of Theseus is also painted the fight between the Centaurs and Lapithae. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_THYIADS_SEC Thyiads ENT_THYIADS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) Pausanias 10.4.3:         primary-uncited     Track-2 formalization of the entity's existing source attestation (no verbatim quote — pointer + grade + flag) 2 1 Primary source identified but not yet quoted verbatim; the on-page summary is an editorial paraphrase pending verification against this text.  
CIT_TROPHONIUS_PAUS Trophonius ENT_TROPHONIUS Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 9, ch. 39 The grove of Trophonius is at some distance from it. They say that Hercyna was playing there with Proserpine the daughter of Demeter, and unwittingly let a goose drop out of her hands, which flew into a hollow cave and hid under a stone, till Proserpine entered the cave and took it from under the stone: and water they say burst forth where Proserpine took up the stone, and the river was called for that reason Hercyna A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_ZEUS_KTESIOS_CULT_PAUS Zeus Ktesios ENT_ZEUS_KTESIOS_CULT Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 31.4 And the Phlyenses have altars to Dionysus-giving Apollo and Lightgiving Artemis, and to Dionysus Crowned with flowers, and to the Nymphs of the River Ismenus, and to Earth whom they call the Great Goddess: and another temple has altars to Fruitbearing Demeter, and Zeus the Protector of Property, and Tithronian Athene, and Proserpine the Firstborn, and to the goddesses called _The Venerable Ones_, (_i.e._ the Eumenide A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    
CIT_ZEUS_MEILICHIOS_CULT_PAUS Zeus Meilichios ENT_ZEUS_MEILICHIOS_CULT Pausanias, Description of Greece (c. 143-176 CE); trans. W.H.S. Jones (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard 1918-1935) SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION Pausanias, Description of Greece Book 1, ch. 37.4 On the other side of the Cephisus is an ancient altar to Milichian (_i.e._ _mild_) Zeus, where Theseus got purified after slaying the progeny of Phytalus. He had slain other robbers, and Sinis, who was his relation by Pittheus his maternal grandfather. And there are the tombs here of Theodectes the son of Phaselites, and of Mnesitheus. A. R. Shilleto 1886 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68946 primary-verbatim   2026-06-17 book.chapter located + name-anchored in chapter + substring gate (Gutenberg #68946/#68680); section-level locus per attestation — audit pending 1 0    

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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]);
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