Socrates', Plato's and Aristotle's ideas about truth are commonly seen as consistent with correspondence theory.
However, it is not strictly necessary that a correspondence theory be married to ontological realism.
Such a person can wholeheartedly adopt a correspondence theory of truth.
Thomas adhered to the correspondence theory of truth, which says that something is true "when it conforms to the external reality."
Finally, some links were forged to the correspondence theory of truth (Tarski, 1944).
This traditional view implies a correspondence theory of truth and might simply be called Realism about Being.
The basis of the correspondence theory is that there is a relationship between the natural ("physical"), the spiritual, and the divine worlds.
The picture theory of language is considered an early correspondence theory of truth.
Some forms of fideism outright reject the correspondence theory of truth, which has major philosophical implications.
These philosophies then resorted either to a phenomenology inspired by Kant or to correspondence theories of knowledge and truth.