eul_wid: upu-bg
DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20335422

Hymnic Collection Anonymous To Foreigners in Greek

"To Foreigners" is a brief anonymous hymn preserved within a collection of Greek religious poetry. The work, identified in the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae, takes the form of a direct poetic address to strangers or outsiders. Its opening lines invoke reverence from those who dwell in the steep city of the lovely-eyed goddess Hera, drinking the ambrosial water of the fair-flowing golden river Hermus. The hymn's survival, though minimal in extent, attests to the breadth of anonymous cultic poetry in antiquity. Its specific focus on addressing foreigners suggests a possible ritual function or theological concern regarding the place of outsiders within a particular religious context, reflecting a facet of ancient Greek religious practice now only glimpsed through this fragmentary text.

unit_1 Αἰδεῖσθε ξενίων κεχρημένον ἠδὲ δόμοιο οἳ πόλιν αἰπεινὴν νύμφης ἐρατώπιδος Ἥρης ναίετε, Σαιδήνης πόδα νείατον ὑψικόμοιο, ἀμβρόσιον πίνοντες ὕδωρ ξανθοῦ ποταμοῖο Ἕρμου καλὰ ῥέοντος ὃν ἀθάνατος τέκετο Ζεύς.

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