Home About Network of subjects Linked subjects heatmap Book indices included Search by subject Search by reference Browse subjects Browse texts

Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

   Search:  
validated results only / all results

and or

Filtering options: (leave empty for all results)
By author:     
By work:        
By subject:
By additional keyword:       



Results for
Please note: the results are produced through a computerized process which may frequently lead to errors, both in incorrect tagging and in other issues. Please use with caution.
Due to load times, full text fetching is currently attempted for validated results only.
Full texts for Hebrew Bible and rabbinic texts is kindly supplied by Sefaria; for Greek and Latin texts, by Perseus Scaife, for the Quran, by Tanzil.net

For a list of book indices included, see here.


graph

graph

All subjects (including unvalidated):
subject book bibliographic info
ciconian, matrons Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283, 284
Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283, 284
ciconian, women by bacchus, orpheus and eurydice, silencing of Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 99
ciconian, women, death of orpheus at hands of Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 89, 97, 98, 99, 100
ciconian, women, farmers, attack on Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 98, 99
ciconian, women, lemnian women compared Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 249
ciconian, women, orpheus and eurydice, death of orpheus at hands of Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 89, 97, 98, 99, 100
ciconian, women, silenced by bacchus Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 99
ciconian, women, supplication, of orpheus in hands of Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 99

List of validated texts:
9 validated results for "ciconian"
1. None, None, nan (8th cent. BCE - 7th cent. BCE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Cicones • Homer, Odyssey, Cicones

 Found in books: Giusti (2018), Disclosure and Discretion in Roman Astrology: Manilius and his Augustan Contemporaries, 206; Morrison (2020), Apollonius Rhodius, Herodotus and Historiography, 174; Toloni (2022), The Story of Tobit: A Comparative Literary Analysis, 49

2. Ovid, Metamorphoses, 10.82-10.84, 11.3, 11.19, 11.40, 11.50, 11.56-11.60, 11.84 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons • Ciconian women • Ciconian women, death of Orpheus at hands of • Ciconian women, farmers, attack on • Ciconian women, silenced by Bacchus • Orpheus and Eurydice, death of Orpheus at hands of Ciconian women • Orpheus and Eurydice, silencing of Ciconian women by Bacchus • supplication , of Orpheus in hands of Ciconian women

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283; Johnson (2008), Ovid before Exile: Art and Punishment in the Metamorphoses, 112, 113; Panoussi(2019), Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women's Rituals in Roman Literature, 89, 97, 98, 99, 100; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283

sup>
10.82 iungere se vati, multae doluere repulsae. 10.83 Ille etiam Thracum populis fuit auctor amorem 10.84 in teneros transferre mares citraque iuventam
11.3
ecce nurus Ciconum, tectae lymphata ferinis
11.19
non exauditi rubuerunt sanguine vatis.
11.40
inrita dicentem nec quicquam voce moventem
11.50
Membra iacent diversa locis. Caput, Hebre, lyramque
11.56
Hic ferus expositum peregrinis anguis harenis 11.57 os petit et sparsos stillanti rore capillos. 11.59 arcet et in lapidem rictus serpentis apertos 11.60 congelat et patulos, ut erant, indurat hiatus.
11.84
esse putes ramos, et non fallere putando.' ' None
sup>
10.82 the prayer of Orpheus; so they called to them 10.83 Eurydice, who still was held among 10.84 the new-arriving shades, and she obeyed
11.3
and even the insensate rocks, to follow him;
11.19
as asking pardon for that vain attempt.
11.40
rush on the doomed stag, loosed some bright fore-noon,
11.50
the soil with ploughshares, and in fields nearby
11.56
deserted fields—harrows and heavy rake 11.57 and their long spade 11.59 had seized upon those implements, and torn 11.60 to pieces oxen armed with threatening horns,
11.84
onward borne by the river to the sea' ' None
3. None, None, nan (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 284; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 284

4. Quintilian, Institutes of Oratory, 1.10.14 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283

sup>
1.10.14 \xa0It is recorded that the greatest generals played on the lyre and the pipe, and that the armies of Sparta were fired to martial ardour by the strains of music. Twenty-Sixth North Carolina Regiment, come to serenade him in his tent, "I\xa0don\'t believe we can have an army without music." (G.\xa0C.\xa0Underwood, in Freeman\'s biography of Lee, Vol.\xa0III, p267. -- And what else is the function of the horns and trumpets attached to our legions? The louder the concert of their notes, the greater is the glorious supremacy of our arms over all the nations of the earth.'' None
5. Quintilian, Institutio Oratoria, 1.10.14 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283

sup>
1.10.14 \xa0It is recorded that the greatest generals played on the lyre and the pipe, and that the armies of Sparta were fired to martial ardour by the strains of music. Twenty-Sixth North Carolina Regiment, come to serenade him in his tent, "I\xa0don\'t believe we can have an army without music." (G.\xa0C.\xa0Underwood, in Freeman\'s biography of Lee, Vol.\xa0III, p267. -- And what else is the function of the horns and trumpets attached to our legions? The louder the concert of their notes, the greater is the glorious supremacy of our arms over all the nations of the earth.'' None
6. None, None, nan (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283

7. None, None, nan (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283, 284; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283, 284

8. Pliny The Younger, Letters, 9.17.3 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283

sup>
9.17.3 To Genitor. I have received your letter in which you complain how offensive to you a really magnificent banquet was, owing to the fact that there were buffoons, dancers, and jesters going round from table to table. Ah ! will you never relax that severe frown of yours even a little ? For my own part, I do not provide any such entertainments like those, but I can put up with those who do. Why then do I not provide them myself? For this reason, that if any dancer makes a lewd movement, if a buffoon is impudent, or a jester makes a senseless fool of himself, it does not amuse me a whit, for I see no novelty or fun in it. I am not giving you a high moral reason, but am only telling you my individual taste. Yet think how many people there are who would regard with disfavour, as partly insipid and partly wearisome, the entertainments which charm and attract you and me. When a reader, or a musician, or a comic actor enters the banqueting-room, how many there are who call for their shoes or lie back on their couches just as completely bored as you were, when you endured what you describe as those monstrosities ! Let us then make allowances for what pleases other people, so that we may induce others to make allowances for us ! Farewell. '' None
9. Vergil, Georgics, 4.523
 Tagged with subjects: • Ciconian matrons

 Found in books: Augoustakis (2014), Flavian Poetry and its Greek Past, 283; Verhagen (2022), Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca, 283

sup>
4.523 Tum quoque marmorea caput a cervice revulsum'' None
sup>
4.523 The fetters, or in showery drops anon'' None



Please note: the results are produced through a computerized process which may frequently lead to errors, both in incorrect tagging and in other issues. Please use with caution.
Due to load times, full text fetching is currently attempted for validated results only.
Full texts for Hebrew Bible and rabbinic texts is kindly supplied by Sefaria; for Greek and Latin texts, by Perseus Scaife, for the Quran, by Tanzil.net

For a list of book indices included, see here.