"Ivan Mortimer Linforth (15 September 1879, San Francisco \u2013 15 December 1976, Berkeley, California) was an American scholar, Professor of Greek at University of California, Berkeley. According to the Biographical Dictionary of North American Classicists he was \"one of the great Hellenists of his time\". He is best known for his book The Arts of Orpheus (1941). In it he analysed the body of texts dealing with Orpheus and the Orphics. He concluded that there was no exclusively 'Orphic' system of belief in Ancient Greece."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Ivan Mortimer Linforth (* 15. September 1879 in San Francisco; \u2020 15. Dezember 1976 in Berkeley) war ein US-amerikanischer Klassischer Philologe und Religionswissenschaftler."@de . "Ivan Mortimer Linforth (* 15. September 1879 in San Francisco; \u2020 15. Dezember 1976 in Berkeley) war ein US-amerikanischer Klassischer Philologe und Religionswissenschaftler."@de . . . "Ivan Mortimer Linforth"@en . . "20698624"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1233"^^ . . . . "Ivan M. Linforth"@de . . . . . . . . "Ivan Mortimer Linforth (15 September 1879, San Francisco \u2013 15 December 1976, Berkeley, California) was an American scholar, Professor of Greek at University of California, Berkeley. According to the Biographical Dictionary of North American Classicists he was \"one of the great Hellenists of his time\". He is best known for his book The Arts of Orpheus (1941). In it he analysed the body of texts dealing with Orpheus and the Orphics. He concluded that there was no exclusively 'Orphic' system of belief in Ancient Greece."@en . . . "1074816949"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .