It is
proposed that this article be deleted because of the following concern:
I can find no reason to believe that the ancient Greeks used "Phthisis" as a mythological personification. I can find no mention in Oxford Classical Dictionary, Brill's New Pauly, or the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Usages cited in LSJ are all medical or metaphorical; no use as a personification is mentioned. This article was previously sourced to theoi.org, which aside from being unreliable also did not support that there was a Greek mythological personification of phthisis; the closest they get is citing a passage of Seneca whose use of the word tabes in Latin might be read as a personification and might be glossed in Greek as phthisis, but one metaphorical use in poetry does not a mythological figure make, and one Latin metaphorical use in poetry certainly does not demonstrate the existence of a Greek myth. (proposed by Caeciliusinhorto-public)
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Find sources: "Phthisis" mythology – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTORPROD
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Expired [[WP:PROD|prod]], concern was: I can find no reason to believe that the ancient Greeks used "Phthisis" as a mythological personification. I can find no mention in Oxford Classical Dictionary, Brill's New Pauly, or the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
Usages cited in LSJ are all medical or metaphorical; no use as a personification is mentioned. This article was previously sourced to theoi.org, which aside from being unreliable
also did not support that there was a Greek mythological personification of phthisis; the closest they get is citing a passage of Seneca whose use of the word
tabes in Latin might be read as a personification and might be glossed in Greek as phthisis, but one metaphorical use in poetry does not a mythological figure make, and one Latin metaphorical use in poetry certainly does not demonstrate the existence of a
Greek myth.