Enrich Greek Religion: fix duplicate title, correct Apollo domain, add sanctuary/hero/household/polis religion sections, Delphi geology, Eleusinian kykeon, new refs
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@@ -801,3 +801,11 @@ To https://gitea.home.everyonce.com/daniel/factbase-ancient-history.git
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status: UPDATED | Greek Philosophy | changes: Fixed duplicate title; added Pythagoras, Pyrrho of Elis, Diogenes of Sinope, and Plotinus to Major Figures; added Pythagoreanism, Cynicism, and Neoplatonism to Major Schools; added legacy note on Neoplatonism's influence on Christian theology and the Renaissance; added footnote [^3] citing Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
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status: UPDATED | Greek Philosophy | changes: Fixed duplicate title; added Pythagoras, Pyrrho of Elis, Diogenes of Sinope, and Plotinus to Major Figures; added Pythagoreanism, Cynicism, and Neoplatonism to Major Schools; added legacy note on Neoplatonism's influence on Christian theology and the Renaissance; added footnote [^3] citing Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
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[main 20f1187] improve: Greek Philosophy
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[2026-02-22 22:39:06] ✅ Committed: improve: Greek Philosophy
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[2026-02-22 22:39:06] Done (45s) — UPDATED
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[2026-02-22 22:39:11] [8/66] Next up...
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[2026-02-22 22:39:11] ━━━ [Greek Religion] (072273) reviews=0 garbage=0 ━━━
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[2026-02-22 22:39:11] 🧹 Bash cleanup applied
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[2026-02-22 22:39:11] 🔍 Enrichment + review pass
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[2026-02-22T22:38:15+00:00] 05754a | Battle of Cannae
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[2026-02-22T22:38:15+00:00] 05754a | Battle of Cannae
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status: UPDATED | Battle of Cannae | changes: Fixed duplicate H1 title; added Carthaginian losses (~6,000, mostly Gauls); named cavalry sub-commanders (Hasdrubal/heavy, Maharbal/Numidian); added survivor/captured figures and Canusium escape; added Aftermath section with Maharbal's famous quote and Rome's emergency response; added Zama connection (Scipio used Cannae tactics); added Archaeology section; updated troop estimate range to reflect modern scholarship (70,000–86,000 Romans); added footnote for World History Encyclopedia and Seven Swords sources
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status: UPDATED | Battle of Cannae | changes: Fixed duplicate H1 title; added Carthaginian losses (~6,000, mostly Gauls); named cavalry sub-commanders (Hasdrubal/heavy, Maharbal/Numidian); added survivor/captured figures and Canusium escape; added Aftermath section with Maharbal's famous quote and Rome's emergency response; added Zama connection (Scipio used Cannae tactics); added Archaeology section; updated troop estimate range to reflect modern scholarship (70,000–86,000 Romans); added footnote for World History Encyclopedia and Seven Swords sources
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duration: 56s
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duration: 56s
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[2026-02-22T22:39:06+00:00] 06dbd9 | Greek Philosophy
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status: UPDATED | Greek Philosophy | changes: Fixed duplicate title; added Pythagoras, Pyrrho of Elis, Diogenes of Sinope, and Plotinus to Major Figures; added Pythagoreanism, Cynicism, and Neoplatonism to Major Schools; added legacy note on Neoplatonism's influence on Christian theology and the Renaissance; added footnote [^3] citing Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
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duration: 45s
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{"level":"info","message":"Starting MCP server","service":"mcp-puppeteer","timestamp":"2026-02-22 22:38:23.181"}
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<!-- factbase:072273 -->
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<!-- factbase:072273 -->
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# Greek Religion
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# Greek Religion
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# Greek Religion
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## Overview
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## Overview
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Ancient Greek religion was a polytheistic system centered on the Olympian gods, practiced through public festivals, sacrifices, oracles, and mystery cults from the Archaic through Hellenistic periods.
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Ancient Greek religion was a polytheistic system centered on the Olympian gods, practiced through public festivals, sacrifices, oracles, and mystery cults from the Archaic through Hellenistic periods. It had no single founding text, no professional priestly class, and no creed — participation in communal ritual was the defining act of piety. [^3]
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## Key Facts
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## Key Facts
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- Period: ~800 BCE – ~400 CE (suppressed under Christianity)
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- Period: ~800 BCE – ~400 CE (suppressed under Christianity)
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@@ -16,22 +14,45 @@ Ancient Greek religion was a polytheistic system centered on the Olympian gods,
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- Zeus: King of the gods, sky and thunder
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- Zeus: King of the gods, sky and thunder
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- Hera: Queen of the gods, marriage
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- Hera: Queen of the gods, marriage
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- Athena: Wisdom and warfare
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- Athena: Wisdom and warfare
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- Apollo: Sun, music, prophecy
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- Apollo: Light, music, prophecy, and healing (distinct from Helios, the sun god)
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- Artemis: Hunt and wilderness
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- Artemis: Hunt and wilderness
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- Poseidon: Sea and earthquakes
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- Poseidon: Sea and earthquakes
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- Aphrodite: Love and beauty
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- Aphrodite: Love and beauty
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- Ares, Hermes, Hephaestus, Demeter, Dionysus [^1]
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- Ares, Hermes, Hephaestus, Demeter, Dionysus [^1]
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## Religious Practices
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## Religious Practices
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- Animal sacrifice at altars
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- Animal sacrifice at altars (the central act of public worship; portions burned for the gods, remainder shared by worshippers)
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- Libations: ritual pouring of wine, water, honey, or oil
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- Votive offerings: objects dedicated at sanctuaries in thanks or supplication
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- Panhellenic festivals: Olympic Games (776 BCE–), Pythian Games, Eleusinian Mysteries
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- Panhellenic festivals: Olympic Games (776 BCE–), Pythian Games, Eleusinian Mysteries
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- Oracle at Delphi: Pythia delivered prophecies from Apollo
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- Oracle at Delphi: Pythia delivered prophecies from Apollo
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- Mystery cults: Eleusinian Mysteries, Orphic mysteries, Dionysiac rites [^2]
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- Mystery cults: Eleusinian Mysteries, Orphic mysteries, Dionysiac rites [^2]
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## Sanctuary Structure
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Greek worship centered on the *temenos* (sacred precinct), which contained an outdoor altar where sacrifices took place. The *naos* (temple) housed the cult statue of the deity but was not a congregational space — rituals occurred outside. Sanctuaries ranged from simple rural shrines to monumental complexes like the Acropolis at Athens or the sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi. [^1]
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## Hero Cults
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Alongside the Olympians, Greeks venerated heroes — deceased humans (often mythological warriors) who received worship at their tombs. Hero cults were intensely local: a hero protected a specific community and was propitiated with chthonic rites (offerings poured into the ground rather than burned upward). Prominent examples include Heracles, Achilles, and Theseus. [^4]
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## Household Religion
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Private worship (*oikos* religion) ran parallel to public cult. Households maintained shrines to Hestia (hearth goddess) and Zeus Ktesios (protector of the household store). The *herm* (a pillar topped with Hermes' head) stood at doorways as protection. Daily libations and small offerings were routine domestic acts. [^3]
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## Polis Religion
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Modern scholarship (Sourvinou-Inwood, 1990) frames Greek religion as fundamentally embedded in the *polis* (city-state): civic identity and religious identity were inseparable. The city organized, funded, and participated in festivals as a collective. This "polis religion" model has been refined but remains influential; Kindt (2012) and Eidinow & Kindt (2015) have expanded it to include personal and private dimensions. [^3]
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## The Oracle at Delphi
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The sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi was active from at least the 8th century BCE. The Pythia (priestess) entered a trance state to deliver oracles. Ancient sources described intoxicating vapors rising from a chasm; modern geological research (De Boer, Hale et al., 2001) identified intersecting fault lines beneath the temple emitting ethylene and ethane gases from bituminous limestone, providing a plausible physical basis for the Pythia's altered state. [^5]
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## The Eleusinian Mysteries
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The Mysteries at Eleusis, centered on the myth of Persephone's abduction by Hades and her return, promised initiates a blessed afterlife. They predated the Greek Dark Ages (attested from ~1500 BCE) and continued into the 4th century CE. Initiates drank the *kykeon*, a barley-and-mint preparation. Wasson, Hofmann & Ruck (1978) proposed the kykeon contained ergot-derived psychoactive alkaloids; this hypothesis remains debated, with a 2024 *Scientific Reports* study suggesting ergot alkaloids could have been detoxified to produce a milder psychoactive compound. [^2] [^6]
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---
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---
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[^1]: Burkert, W. *Greek Religion* (Harvard, 1985)
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[^1]: Burkert, W. *Greek Religion* (Harvard, 1985)
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[^2]: Mikalson, J. *Ancient Greek Religion* (Blackwell, 2010)
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[^2]: Mikalson, J. *Ancient Greek Religion* (Blackwell, 2010)
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---
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[^3]: Eidinow, E. & Kindt, J. (eds). *The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Greek Religion* (Oxford, 2015)
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[^4]: Jones, C. P. "Hero Cults in Ancient Greece." *Brewminate*, 2021.
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[^5]: De Boer, J. Z., Hale, J. R., & Chanton, J. "New evidence for the geological origins of the ancient Delphic oracle." *Geology* 29.8 (2001): 707–710.
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[^6]: Arkeonews. "Ancient Greece's Deadliest Secret: Did a Hallucinogenic Fungus Power the Eleusinian Mysteries?" 2024.
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## Review Queue
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## Review Queue
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