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How to cite Bestiarypedia

Bestiarypedia is a curated digital bestiary of supernatural beings from every mythology. If you use it in an academic publication, a journalistic piece or an editorial project, this page helps you cite it correctly.

Citation generator

Paste the slug or the full URL of any Bestiarypedia article.

Examples

Here's how a real Bestiarypedia citation looks in every format:

APA 7
Bestiarypedia. (2026, March 15). Anubis. Bestiarypedia. https://bestiarypedia.com/en/beings/anubis
Chicago
Bestiarypedia. 2026. "Anubis." Bestiarypedia. Accessed June 4, 2026. https://bestiarypedia.com/en/beings/anubis.
MLA 9
"Anubis." Bestiarypedia, 2026, https://bestiarypedia.com/en/beings/anubis. Accessed 4 June 2026.
Harvard
Bestiarypedia (2026) Anubis. Available at: https://bestiarypedia.com/en/beings/anubis (Accessed: 4 June 2026).
BibTeX
@misc{bestiarypedia_anubis_2026,
  title  = {Anubis},
  author = {{Bestiarypedia}},
  year   = {2026},
  url    = {https://bestiarypedia.com/en/beings/anubis},
  publisher = {Bestiarypedia},
  note   = {Accessed: 2026-06-04}
}

License policy

Bestiarypedia may be cited freely in academic, journalistic and editorial publications through attribution and a canonical link to the article. Full commercial reuse, mass redistribution or the creation of derivative products (books, games, training datasets) requires prior written agreement.

For commercial licensing or press inquiries write to [email protected]