Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Anactoria> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 45 of
45
with 100 triples per page.
- Anactoria abstract "Anactoria (or Anaktoria) is the name of a woman mentioned by poet Sappho as a lover of hers in Sappho's Fragment 16 (Lobel-Page edition) [1], often referred to by the title "To an Army Wife, in Sardis". Sappho 31 is traditionally called the "Ode to Anactoria", though no name appears in it (A. C. Swinburne, quoted in Lipking 1988).Algernon Charles Swinburne wrote a long poem titled Anactoria, in which Sappho addresses Anactoria in imagery that includes sadomasochism, cannibalism, and dystheism.[2] Lipking (1988) discusses Swinburne's poem.".
- Anactoria wikiPageExternalLink books?id=51hqhyw5yLoC.
- Anactoria wikiPageExternalLink acs-idx.pl?type=section&rgn=level1&byte=97791.
- Anactoria wikiPageExternalLink sappho0.htm.
- Anactoria wikiPageID "2664304".
- Anactoria wikiPageLength "1285".
- Anactoria wikiPageOutDegree "14".
- Anactoria wikiPageRevisionID "642118645".
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Algernon_Charles_Swinburne.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Cannibalism.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Category:6th-century_BC_women.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Category:7th-century_BC_women.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Greek_women.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Category:British_poems.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Category:Eros_in_ancient_Greece.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Category:Literary_characters.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Dystheism.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Sadomasochism.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Sappho.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Sappho_31.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Sapphos_Fragment_16.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLink Sardis.
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLinkText "Anactoria".
- Anactoria wikiPageWikiLinkText "Anaktoria".
- Anactoria hasPhotoCollection Anactoria.
- Anactoria wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Anactoria wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Anactoria wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lit-char-stub.
- Anactoria subject Category:6th-century_BC_women.
- Anactoria subject Category:7th-century_BC_women.
- Anactoria subject Category:Ancient_Greek_women.
- Anactoria subject Category:British_poems.
- Anactoria subject Category:Eros_in_ancient_Greece.
- Anactoria subject Category:Literary_characters.
- Anactoria hypernym Woman.
- Anactoria type Person.
- Anactoria type Character.
- Anactoria comment "Anactoria (or Anaktoria) is the name of a woman mentioned by poet Sappho as a lover of hers in Sappho's Fragment 16 (Lobel-Page edition) [1], often referred to by the title "To an Army Wife, in Sardis". Sappho 31 is traditionally called the "Ode to Anactoria", though no name appears in it (A. C.".
- Anactoria label "Anactoria".
- Anactoria sameAs Anactória.
- Anactoria sameAs m.07wbhz.
- Anactoria sameAs Q4750729.
- Anactoria sameAs Q4750729.
- Anactoria wasDerivedFrom Anactoria?oldid=642118645.
- Anactoria isPrimaryTopicOf Anactoria.