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Entity | Max. Freq | Min. Freq | ||
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Olympia (Greece) | 24 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Pisa | 22 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Pytho (Greece) | 20 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Nemea (Greece) | 20 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Pytho (Greece) | 16 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Libya (Libya) | 12 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Greece (Greece) | 12 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Nemea (Greece) | 12 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Arcadia (Greece) | 10 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Cirrha (Greece) | 10 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in Pindar, Odes (ed. Diane Arnson Svarlien).
Found 871 total hits in 294 results.
Nile (search for this): book I., poem 2
476 BC (search for this): book O., poem 3
Olympian 3
For Theron of Acragas
Chariot Race
476 B. C.
I pray that I may be pleasing to the hospitable sons of Tyndareus and to Helen of the beautiful hair while I honor renowned Acragas by raising my song in praise of Theron's victory at Olympia, won by the choicest of horses with untiring feet. With this in view the Muse stood beside me when I found a shining new mannerof fitting the splendid voice of the victory procession to the Dorian sandal.
For the garlands twined around his hair exact from me this sacred debt, to blend harmoniously for the son of Aenesidamus the embroidered song of the lyre and the cry of the flutes with the arrangement of words, and Pisa bids me to raise my voice—Pisa, from whichgod-fated songs come often to men,
for anyone over whose brow the strict Aetolian judge of the Greeks tosses up around his hair the gray-green adornment of olive leaves, fulfilling the ancient behests of Heracles; the olive which once the son of Amphitryon brought from the shady sp
Arcadia (Greece) (search for this): book O., poem 3
Olympus (Greece) (search for this): book O., poem 3
Danube (search for this): book O., poem 3
Olympia (Greece) (search for this): book O., poem 3
Olympian 3
For Theron of Acragas
Chariot Race
476 B. C.
I pray that I may be pleasing to the hospitable sons of Tyndareus and to Helen of the beautiful hair while I honor renowned Acragas by raising my song in praise of Theron's victory at Olympia, won by the choicest of horses with untiring feet. With this in view the Muse stood beside me when I found a shining new mannerof fitting the splendid voice of the victory procession to the Dorian sandal.
For the garlands twined around his hair exact from me this sacred debt, to blend harmoniously for the son of Aenesidamus the embroidered song of the lyre and the cry of the flutes with the arrangement of words, and Pisa bids me to raise my voice—Pisa, from whichgod-fated songs come often to men,
for anyone over whose brow the strict Aetolian judge of the Greeks tosses up around his hair the gray-green adornment of olive leaves, fulfilling the ancient behests of Heracles; the olive which once the son of Amphitryon brought from the shady sp
Pisa (search for this): book O., poem 3
474 BC (search for this): book P., poem 3
Pythian 3
For Hieron of Syracuse
Horse Race
?474 B. C.
If it were proper for this commonplace prayer to be made by my tongue, I would want Cheiron the son of Philyra to be alive again, he who has departed, the wide-ruling son of Cronus son of Uranus; and I would want him to reign again in the glens of Pelion, the beast of the wildswhose mind was friendly to men; just as he was when once he reared Asclepius, that gentle craftsman who drove pain from the limbs that he healed, that hero who cured all types of diseases.
His mother, the daughter of Phlegyas with his fine horses, before she could bring him to term with the help of Eleithuia who attends on childbirth, was stricken by the goldenarrows of Artemis in her bedroom and descended to the house of Hades, by the skills of Apollo. The anger of the children of Zeus is not in vain. But she made light of Apollo, in the error of her mind, and consented to another marriage without her father's knowledge, although she had before lain with
Pelion (Greece) (search for this): book P., poem 3
Pythian 3
For Hieron of Syracuse
Horse Race
?474 B. C.
If it were proper for this commonplace prayer to be made by my tongue, I would want Cheiron the son of Philyra to be alive again, he who has departed, the wide-ruling son of Cronus son of Uranus; and I would want him to reign again in the glens of Pelion, the beast of the wildswhose mind was friendly to men; just as he was when once he reared Asclepius, that gentle craftsman who drove pain from the limbs that he healed, that hero who cured all types of diseases.
His mother, the daughter of Phlegyas with his fine horses, before she could bring him to term with the help of Eleithuia who attends on childbirth, was stricken by the goldenarrows of Artemis in her bedroom and descended to the house of Hades, by the skills of Apollo. The anger of the children of Zeus is not in vain. But she made light of Apollo, in the error of her mind, and consented to another marriage without her father's knowledge, although she had before lain with
Cirrha (Greece) (search for this): book P., poem 3