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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

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12 results for "exile"
1. Homer, Iliad, 3.278-3.279, 5.539, 18.535, 19.259-19.260 (8th cent. BCE - 7th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •exile, in empedocles Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 86, 90
3.278. / Then in their midst Agamemnon lifted up his hands and prayed aloud:Father Zeus, that rulest from Ida, most glorious, most great, and thou Sun, that beholdest all things and hearest all things, and ye rivers and thou earth, and ye that in the world below take vengeance on men that are done with life, whosoever hath sworn a false oath; 3.279. / Then in their midst Agamemnon lifted up his hands and prayed aloud:Father Zeus, that rulest from Ida, most glorious, most great, and thou Sun, that beholdest all things and hearest all things, and ye rivers and thou earth, and ye that in the world below take vengeance on men that are done with life, whosoever hath sworn a false oath; 5.539. / son of Pergasus, whom the Trojans honoured even as the sons of Priam, for that he was swift to fight amid the foremost. Him did lord Agamemnon smite with his spear upon the shield, and this stayed not the spear, but clean through it passed the bronze, and into the lower belly he drave it through the belt; 18.535. / And amid them Strife and Tumult joined in the fray, and deadly Fate, grasping one man alive, fresh-wounded, another without a wound, and another she dragged dead through the mellay by the feet; and the raiment that she had about her shoulders was red with the blood of men. Even as living mortals joined they in the fray and fought; 19.259. / made prayer to Zeus; and all the Argives sat thereby in silence, hearkening as was meet unto the king. And he spake in prayer, with a look up to the wide heaven:Be Zeus my witness first, highest and best of gods, and Earth and Sun, and the Erinyes, that under earth 19.260. / take vengeance on men, whosoever hath sworn a false oath, that never laid I hand upon the girl Briseis either by way of a lover's embrace or anywise else, but she ever abode untouched in my huts. And if aught of this oath be false, may the gods give me woes
2. Aeschylus, Fragments, None (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 88
3. Aeschylus, Fragments, None (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 88
4. Aeschylus, Fragments, None (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 88
5. Pindar, Fragments, 3.13 (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •exile, in empedocles Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 87
6. Pindar, Olympian Odes, 7.24-7.26 (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •exile, in empedocles Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 87
7. Pindar, Pythian Odes, 2 (6th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •exile, in empedocles Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 87
8. Empedocles, Fragments, None (5th cent. BCE - 5th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 89, 90
9. Plato, Republic, 364, 366, 365 (5th cent. BCE - 4th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 83
10. Aeschylus of Alexandria, Fragments, None (3rd cent. BCE - 2nd cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 88
11. Plutarch, On Exilio, None (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •exile, in empedocles Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 83, 88
607c. but by coming to Thebes expatriated his 'descendant,' Euhius Dionysus, Rouser of women, Him that is adored in frenzy"? Now as to the matters at which Aeschylus hinted darkly when he said And pure Apollo, god exiled from heaven "let my lips" in the words of Herodotus "be sealed"; Empedocles, however, when beginning the presentation of his philosophy, says by way of prelude: Alaw there is, an oracle of Doom, of old enacted by the assembled gods, That if a Daemon — such as live for ages— Defile himself with foul and sinful murder, He must for seasons thrice ten thousand roam Far from the Blest: such is the path Itread,
12. Julius Africanus, Kestoi, 79  Tagged with subjects: •exile, in empedocles Found in books: Petrovic and Petrovic (2016) 86