Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Epic Catalog

 Epic Catalog
type
FeatureClass
 Epic Catalog
label
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog
page
EpicCatalog
 Epic Catalog
comment
Epic poetry has a habit of, at some point, padding out the story with a long list of characters, often famous historical or mythic figures. Some critics even consider this one of the genre's defining characteristics. In very old works, this can be a valuable resource for historians.
More modern poetry uses a similar technique, pioneered by Walt Whitman, using lists of anything.
Contrast Long List, where an absurdly long list or enumeration is played for comedy.
 Epic Catalog
fetched
2024-02-19T00:30:13Z
 Epic Catalog
parsed
2024-02-19T00:30:14Z
 Epic Catalog
processingComment
Dropped link to OedipusRex: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Epic Catalog
processingUnknown
OedipusRex
 Epic Catalog
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Epic Catalog / int_1bb34bf8
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_1bb34bf8
comment
The Song of Roland features long lists.
 Epic Catalog / int_1bb34bf8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_1bb34bf8
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Song of Roland
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_1bb34bf8
 Epic Catalog / int_345567d1
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_345567d1
comment
Poetic Edda and Prose Edda contain extended genealogies, lists of doughty deeds and such. One of the better known is Dvergatal, the "list of dwarfs", in "Völuspá" (from the Poetic Edda) — six stanzas with nothing but dwarf names.
 Epic Catalog / int_345567d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_345567d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Poetic Edda
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_345567d1
 Epic Catalog / int_3b4153c8
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_3b4153c8
comment
Paradise Lost ends with Michael showing Adam the whole of human history from the immediate consequences of The Fall to Judgment Day, name dropping the whole way.
 Epic Catalog / int_3b4153c8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_3b4153c8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Paradise Lost
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_3b4153c8
 Epic Catalog / int_3b88d68c
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_3b88d68c
comment
Dante's The Divine Comedy engages in several extended name drops in Inferno and Paradiso.
 Epic Catalog / int_3b88d68c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_3b88d68c
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Divine Comedy
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_3b88d68c
 Epic Catalog / int_49b587be
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_49b587be
comment
The Canterbury Tales starts with a list of all the people going on the trip. It lasts for 858 lines. Presumably, the finished product was going to have all of them tell four stories to the group.
 Epic Catalog / int_49b587be
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_49b587be
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Canterbury Tales
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_49b587be
 Epic Catalog / int_4b187e74
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_4b187e74
comment
The Odyssey grinds to a halt when the travelers arrive in Hades and see all the most beautiful women in history, both real and fictional.
 Epic Catalog / int_4b187e74
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_4b187e74
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Odyssey
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_4b187e74
 Epic Catalog / int_594935a7
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_594935a7
comment
The Thebaid: The forces allied with Argos are lined out in 300 lines at the beginning of Book Four. Unlike several epic lists, the catalogue is less about listing all the individuals involved as with highlighting the most important characters in the coming story and describing their motivations for going to battle.
 Epic Catalog / int_594935a7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_594935a7
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Thebaid
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_594935a7
 Epic Catalog / int_a496594e
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_a496594e
comment
Quite common in The Histories by Herodotus. Aside from various genealogies, there's also a very detailed record of the troop contingents that made up King Xerxes's invasion force.
 Epic Catalog / int_a496594e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_a496594e
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Histories
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_a496594e
 Epic Catalog / int_a5549ed0
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_a5549ed0
comment
The Bible has several very long genealogies to establish that the Chosen People actually can make the claim through bloodlines. Most people on a quest to read the Bible from beginning to end hit the dreaded "The Begats" and give up.
 Epic Catalog / int_a5549ed0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_a5549ed0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Bible
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_a5549ed0
 Epic Catalog / int_a5b8b965
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_a5b8b965
comment
The Iliad has several catalogues. The most famous is the Catalogue of Ships in Book 2, some 250 lines just listing all the Greek commanders and how many ships each one brought from his domains. This includes the big names — the Atreides (Agamemnon and Menelaus), both Ajaxs, Diomedes, Nestor, Odysseus, Achilles, and so on — and an awful lot of obscure nobodies like pretty boy Nireus who brought all of three ships. For the curious, the Catalogue totals 1186 ships, which means that Helen is worth a little under 1.2 Helens.— Apparently, as the poem developed over time, more and more people wanted to get a mention of an ancestor somewhere in the story. Some people have claimed the name of every person who died during the war is mentioned somewhere in the full text.
 Epic Catalog / int_a5b8b965
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_a5b8b965
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Iliad
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_a5b8b965
 Epic Catalog / int_a7ce08de
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_a7ce08de
comment
Theogony comes close to being nothing but this trope, but the straightest examples would be the lists of the lovers of Zeus and the male gods their children (lines 886-964) and of the mortal lovers of goddesses and their children (965-1022).
 Epic Catalog / int_a7ce08de
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_a7ce08de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Theogony
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_a7ce08de
 Epic Catalog / int_adc5921
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_adc5921
comment
"Krákumál": The first part of the poem (up to stanza #21) is a list of the noteworthy deeds of Ragnar Lodbrok's life, beginning with the slaying of a dragon, and recalling some 20 battles and their locations, including the famous kings and chiefs who fell in these battles.
 Epic Catalog / int_adc5921
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_adc5921
featureConfidence
1.0
 Krákumál
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_adc5921
 Epic Catalog / int_bb17a594
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_bb17a594
comment
The Fall of the House of Usher (2023): When Juno says she wants to stop taking Ligodone, Roderick lists off all the horrible symptoms she can expect to experience while weaning herself off it.
 Epic Catalog / int_bb17a594
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_bb17a594
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Fall of the House of Usher (2023)
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_bb17a594
 Epic Catalog / int_ca5d97f1
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_ca5d97f1
comment
Monty Python's Flying Circus parodies this with Njorl's Saga.
 Epic Catalog / int_ca5d97f1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_ca5d97f1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Monty Python's Flying Circus
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_ca5d97f1
 Epic Catalog / int_d50ee4b7
type
Epic Catalog
 Epic Catalog / int_d50ee4b7
comment
Beowulf does a little bit of this at the beginning, enumerating the line of Danish kings until Hrothgar.
 Epic Catalog / int_d50ee4b7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Epic Catalog / int_d50ee4b7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Beowulf
hasFeature
Epic Catalog / int_d50ee4b7

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Heimskringla / int_439e5a4f
type
Epic Catalog
 The Faerie Queene / int_439e5a4f
type
Epic Catalog
 The Iliad / int_439e5a4f
type
Epic Catalog
 The Worm Ouroboros / int_439e5a4f
type
Epic Catalog
 Theogony / int_439e5a4f
type
Epic Catalog