@@ -5284,3 +5284,12 @@ To https://gitea.home.everyonce.com/daniel/factbase-ancient-history.git
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[0m[1G[0m[0m[?25h
status: UPDATED | Sumer | changes: Applied 32 review answers; fixed duplicate # Sumer heading; fixed footnote formatting (missing newline before ---); cleared 2 residual stale questions left by apply_review_answers (bug filed as Vikunja #98); added @t[~2100 BCE] tag to Epic of Gilgamesh; enriched with new Environmental Foundations section citing Giosan & Goodman 2025 PLOS ONE study on tidal origins of Sumerian agriculture and urbanization; committed and pushed
status: UPDATED | Sumer | changes: Applied 32 review answers; fixed duplicate # Sumer heading; fixed footnote formatting (missing newline before ---); cleared 2 residual stale questions left by apply_review_answers (bug filed as Vikunja #98); added @t[~2100 BCE] tag to Epic of Gilgamesh; enriched with new Environmental Foundations section citing Giosan & Goodman 2025 PLOS ONE study on tidal origins of Sumerian agriculture and urbanization; committed and pushed
status: UPDATED | Twelve Tables | changes: Applied 26 answered review questions; fixed duplicate title; repaired broken footnote/separator; corrected date range to 451–449 BCE (formal promulgation); added Latin name (Lex Duodecim Tabularum); enriched with delegation to Athens/Solon, all-patrician first decemviri, 10+2 tablet creation process, 449 BCE plebeian uprising, Livy fons omnis quote, Cicero on student memorization, 3rd-century BCE supersession, specific penalties; added World History Encyclopedia footnote [^3]
status: UPDATED | Twelve Tables | changes: Applied 26 answered review questions; fixed duplicate title; repaired broken footnote/separator; corrected date range to 451–449 BCE (formal promulgation); added Latin name (Lex Duodecim Tabularum); enriched with delegation to Athens/Solon, all-patrician first decemviri, 10+2 tablet creation process, 449 BCE plebeian uprising, Livy fons omnis quote, Cicero on student memorization, 3rd-century BCE supersession, specific penalties; added World History Encyclopedia footnote [^3]
duration: 79s
duration: 79s
[2026-02-23T00:26:31+00:00] 6d7974 | Sumer
status: UPDATED | Sumer | changes: Applied 32 review answers; fixed duplicate # Sumer heading; fixed footnote formatting (missing newline before ---); cleared 2 residual stale questions left by apply_review_answers (bug filed as Vikunja #98); added @t[~2100 BCE] tag to Epic of Gilgamesh; enriched with new Environmental Foundations section citing Giosan & Goodman 2025 PLOS ONE study on tidal origins of Sumerian agriculture and urbanization; committed and pushed
Roman religion was a polytheistic system that evolved from early Italic and Etruscan traditions, heavily influenced by Greek religion, and centered on state ritual, augury, and the maintenance of *pax deorum* (peace with the gods).
Roman religion was a polytheistic system that evolved from early Italic and Etruscan traditions, heavily influenced by Greek religion, and centered on state ritual, augury, and the maintenance of *pax deorum* (peace with the gods).
## Key Facts
## Key Facts
- Period: ~8th century BCE – ~4th century CE (suppressed under Christianity)
- Period: ~8th century BCE – ~4th century CE (suppressed under Christianity) <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Type: Polytheistic, with later imperial cult
- Type: Polytheistic, with later imperial cult <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- Key institutions: Pontifex Maximus, Vestal Virgins, College of Augurs
- Key institutions: Pontifex Maximus, Vestal Virgins, College of Augurs <!-- reviewed:2026-02-23 -->
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 10: "Period: ~8th century BCE – ~4th century CE (suppressed under Christianity)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 11: "Type: Polytheistic, with later imperial cult" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 12: "Key institutions: Pontifex Maximus, Vestal Virgins, College of Augurs" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 13: "Influenced by: Etruscan religion, Greek religion" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 16: "Jupiter: King of the gods (Greek Zeus)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 17: "Juno: Queen of the gods (Greek Hera)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 18: "Mars: God of war (Greek Ares), father of Romulus" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 19: "Minerva: Goddess of wisdom (Greek Athena)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 20: "Venus: Goddess of love (Greek Aphrodite), ancestor of the Julian family" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 24: "Augury: Reading divine will through bird flight, entrails, and omens" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 25: "Vestal Virgins: Six priestesses maintaining the sacred flame of Vesta" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 26: "Imperial cult: Deification of emperors beginning with Julius Caesar (42 BCE)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 30: "Cult of Isis (from Egypt)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 31: "Mithraism (from Persia, popular with soldiers)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 32: "Cult of Cybele (from Anatolia)" - what is the source?
> Beard et al. (1998) [^1], Scheid (2003) [^2]
- [x]`@q[stale]` Line 21: "Neptune, Mercury, Diana, Apollo, Vulcan, Ceres [^1]" - Beard source from 1998 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
- [x]`@q[stale]` Line 21: "Neptune, Mercury, Diana, Apollo, Vulcan, Ceres [^1]" - Beard source from 1998 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
> Scholarship remains current. Beard et al. (1998) findings are still accepted by modern historians.
> Scholarship remains current. Beard et al. (1998) findings are still accepted by modern historians.
- [x]`@q[stale]` Line 27: "*Religio*: Proper observance of ritual obligations to maintain divine favor [^2]" - Scheid source from 2003 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
- [x]`@q[stale]` Line 27: "*Religio*: Proper observance of ritual obligations to maintain divine favor [^2]" - Scheid source from 2003 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
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