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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Mythology</text>
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                <text>Women’s sports in Greek heroic myths.</text>
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            <text>Literary source</text>
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        <name>Translation</name>
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            <text>Thus Hesiod is more recent (i.e., than Homer), for he introduces Hippomenes competing naked with Atalanta.</text>
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      <element elementId="192">
        <name>Translation used</name>
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            <text>Glenn W. Most, Hesiod. The Shield. Catalogue of Women. Other Fragments, (= Loeb Classical Library; 503), Cambridge, MA 2018. </text>
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            <text>νεώτερος οὖν Ἡσίοδος γυμνὸν εἰσάγων Ἱππομένη ἀγωνιζόμενον Ἀταλάντῃ.</text>
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            <text>Glenn W. Most (ed.), Hesiod. The Shield. Catalogue of Women. Other Fragments, (= Loeb Classical Library; 503), Cambridge, MA 2018.</text>
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            <text>Reference to Hesiod from  Scholia T on Homer's Iliad (23.683b). The scholion argues that Hesiod is later than Homer.  The assumption is that competing naked in ancient Greek athletics was an innovation that is to be dated later than Homer, who mentions the hero putting on his belt before the contest in the passage in the Iliad to which the scholion refers (23.683).</text>
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              <text>Hesiod, Catalogus feminarum, Fragment 50: the race of Atalanta and Hippomenes/Melanion</text>
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              <text>Hesiod</text>
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          <name>Date</name>
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              <text>8th cent. BCE</text>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <text>Epic</text>
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