historical_group

older peoples pre-greekroman

01KJNKDY4544E2G5HB3C67DTZ5

Properties

_kg_layer
0
description
A collective term for ancient civilizations and populations that existed prior to the rise and prominence of the Greek and Roman empires.
historical_record_issue
vexation regarding beginnings
temporal_relation
preceded Greeks and Romans

Relationships

  • precededGreeks
    description
    Various ancient civilizations and groups existed and developed before the advent of the Greek civilization.
    source
    Sourcetext_chunk
    source_text
    the older peoples who lived before the Greeks and Romans
  • precededRomans
    description
    Various ancient civilizations and groups existed and developed before the advent of the Roman civilization.
    source
    Sourcetext_chunk
    source_text
    the older peoples who lived before the Greeks and Romans
  • extracted_fromSource
    extracted_at
    2026-03-01T21:08:22.605Z
    source
    Sourcetext_chunk
  • same_as01KJNKCVZD0BM1561MW9VW3EKH
    confidence
    0.9
    detected_at
    2026-03-01T21:11:41.573Z
    detected_by
    kg-dedupe-resolver
    reasoning
    The source entity describes 'older peoples pre-greekroman' as a collective term for ancient civilizations existing before Greece and Rome, noting a 'vexation regarding beginnings' due to historical records. Candidate 1, 'ancient nations,' is a collective term for ancient civilizations with 'high-flown and often obscure writing style,' which directly aligns with the 'vexation regarding beginnings' property of the source. The temporal context of 'ancient' also fits.
  • same_as01KJNKD5YY0SGK9N1NW097STSJ
    confidence
    0.9
    detected_at
    2026-03-01T21:11:41.573Z
    detected_by
    kg-dedupe-resolver
    reasoning
    The source entity describes 'older peoples pre-greekroman' as a collective term for ancient civilizations existing before Greece and Rome. Candidate 4, also labeled 'ancient nations,' refers to 'early human societies' in 'early ages, when the world was young,' which perfectly matches the temporal definition of the source. Furthermore, Candidate 4 is explicitly marked as 'same_as' Candidate 1, which itself shows strong alignment with the source entity's properties regarding historical record issues.