{"database": "deitydb", "table": "entity_relationships", "is_view": false, "human_description_en": "where relationship_type = \"paired_with\"", "rows": [[152, "ENT_CHRONOS", "paired_with", "ENT_ANANKE", "medium", "Chronos and Ananke are paired or structurally associated in Orphic cosmogony.", "SRC_THEOI_GODS", "reviewed", null], [215, "ENT_EGY_WEPWAWET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_ANUBIS", "medium", "Both are jackal/canine funerary or way-opening deities.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [249, "ENT_EGY_THOTH", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_ISIS", "medium", "Thoth and Isis both occupy major magical and healing roles.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [250, "ENT_EGY_THOTH", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_KHONSU", "medium", "Thoth and Khonsu share lunar associations.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [252, "ENT_EGY_SESHAT", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_PTAH", "medium", "Seshat and Ptah overlap in temple foundation, measurement, and craft/order contexts.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [254, "ENT_EGY_THOTH", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SESHAT", "high", "Thoth and Seshat share writing, record-keeping, and measurement domains.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [255, "ENT_EGY_HU", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SIA", "medium", "Hu and Sia are paired theological personifications of utterance and perception.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [257, "ENT_EGY_KHNUM", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_ANUKET", "high", "Khnum and Anuket are linked in Elephantine/Nile theology.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [258, "ENT_EGY_KHNUM", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_HEKET", "medium", "Khnum and Heket are linked in creation/birth traditions.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [261, "ENT_EGY_KHNUM", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SATET", "high", "Khnum and Satet are linked in Elephantine/Nile theology.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [262, "ENT_EGY_PTAH", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SEKER", "high", "Ptah and Seker are joined in Memphite funerary/craft theology.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [263, "ENT_EGY_PTAH", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SESHAT", "medium", "Ptah and Seshat overlap in craft, measurement, and temple foundation contexts.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [268, "ENT_EGY_HATHOR", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SEKHMET", "medium", "Hathor and Sekhmet overlap in solar/lioness goddess transformations.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [269, "ENT_EGY_SEKHMET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_BASTET", "medium", "Sekhmet and Bastet are linked through lioness/feline protective goddess traditions.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [270, "ENT_EGY_ISIS", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SERQET", "medium", "Isis and Serqet overlap in protective, healing, and anti-venom contexts.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [271, "ENT_EGY_BES", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_TAWERET", "medium", "Bes and Taweret are paired in household and childbirth protection.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [272, "ENT_EGY_SERQET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_MAFDET", "medium", "Both are protective powers associated with dangerous or venomous beings.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [273, "ENT_EGY_TAWERET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_HEKET", "medium", "Both are connected to childbirth and protective birth contexts.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [277, "ENT_EGY_WADJET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_NEKHBET", "high", "Wadjet and Nekhbet form the Two Ladies protective royal pair.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [279, "ENT_EGY_SHESMETET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SEKHMET", "medium", "Shesmetet overlaps with lioness/fierce protective goddess traditions.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [280, "ENT_EGY_BASTET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SEKHMET", "medium", "Bastet and Sekhmet are linked through feline protective goddess traditions.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [281, "ENT_EGY_RERET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_TAWERET", "medium", "Reret and Taweret overlap as hippopotamus protective goddesses.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [282, "ENT_EGY_SATET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_ANUKET", "high", "Satet and Anuket are paired in Nile cataract-region theology.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [338, "ENT_EGY_ISIS", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_THOTH", "medium", "Isis and Thoth both operate in magical and healing traditions.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "reviewed", null], [458, "ENT_MES_TIAMAT", "paired_with", "ENT_MES_KINGU", "high", "Kingu is Tiamat\u2019s champion/consort in the Enuma Elish tradition.", "SRC_BLACK_GREEN_MESO", "reviewed", null], [476, "ENT_MES_DUMUZI_TAMMUZ", "paired_with", "ENT_MES_INANNA_ISHTAR", "high", "Dumuzi is the consort of Inanna in Sumerian myth and sacred marriage traditions.", "SRC_BLACK_GREEN_MESO", "reviewed", null], [522, "ENT_CAN_ANAT", "paired_with", "ENT_CAN_BAAL", "high", "Anat is closely associated with Baal in Ugaritic myth.", "SRC_UGARIT_DDD", "reviewed", null], [1313, "ENT_DEMETER", "paired_with", "ENT_IACCHUS", "medium", "Demeter and Iacchus are liturgically paired in the Eleusinian mystery procession.", "SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS", "reviewed", null], [1314, "ENT_NYX", "paired_with", "ENT_PHANES", "medium", "Nyx and Phanes are a cosmogonic pair in Orphic tradition; Phanes transmits sovereignty to Nyx.", "SRC_THEOI_GODS", "reviewed", null], [1315, "ENT_MANICH_MOTHER_LIFE", "paired_with", "ENT_MANICH_PRIMAL_MAN", "high", "Mother of Life and Primal Man are a paired evocation in the Manichaean cosmogonic sequence.", "SRC_MANICHAEAN_KEPHALAIA", "reviewed", null], [1547, "ENT_MES_GILGAMESH", "paired_with", "ENT_MES_ENKIDU", "high", "Gilgamesh and Enkidu are the paradigm hero-companion pair in world literature; created to be Gilgamesh's equal, Enkidu becomes his closest companion; together they defeat Humbaba in the Cedar Forest and the Bull of Heaven; Enkidu's death is the pivotal event of the Epic that launches Gilgamesh on his quest for immortality.", "SRC_GEORGE_GILGAMESH", "reviewed", "PER_MES_OLD_BAB"], [1548, "ENT_MES_ENKIDU", "paired_with", "ENT_MES_GILGAMESH", "high", "Enkidu as Gilgamesh's equal companion; their relationship is the emotional core of the Epic.", "SRC_GEORGE_GILGAMESH", "reviewed", "PER_MES_OLD_BAB"], [1583, "ENT_MES_ENKI_EA", "paired_with", "ENT_MES_NINHURSAG", "high", "Enki and Ninhursag (ETCSL 1.1.1) is one of the most important Sumerian mythological compositions; Enki and Ninhursag are the divine couple in Dilmun (the sacred land); their sexual encounters and the resulting chain of offspring goddesses drives the narrative; their complex relationship (creative partnership that turns to conflict when Enki eats the plants Ninhursag grew, then reconciliation when Ninhursag heals Enki's ailments) establishes them as a divine creative pair whose interaction generates life and the divine order of nature.", "SRC_ETCSL", "reviewed", "PER_MES_EARLY"], [1584, "ENT_MES_NINHURSAG", "paired_with", "ENT_MES_ENKI_EA", "high", "Ninhursag as Enki's divine partner in the Enki and Ninhursag myth (ETCSL 1.1.1); their relationship alternates between creative union and conflict; Ninhursag ultimately heals the ailing Enki and is celebrated as the mother of all living things.", "SRC_ETCSL", "reviewed", "PER_MES_EARLY"], [1648, "ENT_EGY_OSIRIS", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_HAPY_NILE", "medium", "Osiris and Hapy are paired in Egyptian theology as complementary deities of Nile fertility: Hapy embodies the inundation itself; Osiris embodies the agricultural renewal it enables. They appear together in funerary and agricultural contexts without being identified. Faulkner, Pyramid Texts Utterance 442.", "SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS", "reviewed", null], [1649, "ENT_EGY_HAPY_NILE", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_OSIRIS", "medium", "Hapy and Osiris are paired as complementary Nile-fertility deities; Hapy is the flood, Osiris the renewal. Faulkner, Pyramid Texts Utterance 442.", "SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS", "reviewed", null], [1650, "ENT_EGY_SIA", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_THOTH", "medium", "Sia (divine perception/understanding) and Thoth (divine knowledge/writing) are paired in New Kingdom cosmological texts as complementary aspects of divine cognition; both travel on the solar barque. Papyrus Bremner-Rhind; Book of the Dead ch. 17.", "SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS", "reviewed", null], [1651, "ENT_EGY_THOTH", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SIA", "medium", "Thoth and Sia are paired cognitive deities on the solar barque; Thoth provides knowledge/recording, Sia provides perception/understanding. Book of the Dead ch. 17.", "SRC_FAULKNER_PYRAMID_TEXTS", "reviewed", null], [1652, "ENT_THEURGY", "paired_with", "ENT_MAGIC", "medium", "Theurgy and magic are paired as overlapping late-antique ritual categories that the tradition itself labored to distinguish: theurgy (theurg\u00eda) claimed divine sanction and soul-ascent; magic (goeteia/mageia) was the pejorative other. Iamblichus De Mysteriis I.1-2 is the key text defending the distinction. They share techniques while differing in theological framing.", "SRC_BURKERT_GREEK_RELIGION", "reviewed", null], [1775, "ENT_ETR_TUCHULCHA", "paired_with", "ENT_ETR_CHARUN", "high", "De Grummond (2006): Tuchulcha and Charun appear together in the Tomba dell'Orco; the two underworld daemons form a paired terror-couple in Etruscan funerary iconography.", "SRC_DEGRUMMOND_ETRUSCAN", "approved", null], [1785, "ENT_CEL_ROSMERTA", "paired_with", "ENT_ROM_MERCURY", "high", "Duval (1976) pp. 78-82: Rosmerta is frequently paired with Roman Mercury in dedications at Trier, Metz, and Wiesbaden, suggesting a local sovereignty-couple interpretation under the Roman interpretatio.", "SRC_DUVAL_DIEUX_GAULE", "approved", null], [1852, "ENT_PONTUS", "paired_with", "ENT_THALASSA", "high", "Pontus (Sea) and Thalassa (Sea) are the paired primordial sea entities in Hesiodic and later cosmological tradition.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [1853, "ENT_THALASSA", "paired_with", "ENT_PONTUS", "high", "Hesiodic cosmological tradition.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [1860, "ENT_APOLLO", "paired_with", "ENT_HYACINTHUS", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.10.3: Apollo loved Hyacinthus; the youth died when Zephyrus (or a discus) struck him, and the hyacinth flower sprang from his blood.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1862, "ENT_APHRODITE", "paired_with", "ENT_ADONIS_HERO", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.14.4: Aphrodite loved Adonis and kept him hidden; after his death by a boar she mourned him and secured his return for part of each year.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1866, "ENT_ATALANTA", "paired_with", "ENT_MELEAGER", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.8.2: Atalanta and Meleager hunted the Calydonian Boar together; Atalanta drew first blood and Meleager awarded her the hide.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1867, "ENT_MELEAGER", "paired_with", "ENT_ATALANTA", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.8.2.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1871, "ENT_ORESTES", "paired_with", "ENT_PYLADES", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Epitome 6.25; Aeschylus Libation Bearers: Orestes and Pylades are the archetypal heroic friendship pair; Pylades accompanies Orestes through the matricide and its aftermath.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1872, "ENT_PYLADES", "paired_with", "ENT_ORESTES", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Epitome 6.25.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1873, "ENT_POSEIDON", "paired_with", "ENT_PELOPS", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Epitome 2.3: Poseidon loved Pelops and took him to Olympus; later restored him and aided him with winged horses for the race against Oenomaus.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1919, "ENT_ALPHEUS", "paired_with", "ENT_ARETHUSA", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.4.5 (scholiast context): Alpheus the river god pursued the nymph Arethusa; she fled under the sea to Sicily and emerged as the Arethusa spring; the river's waters were held to mingle with hers.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [1931, "ENT_NEREUS", "paired_with", "ENT_DORIS", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 240-241: \"Nereus and Doris, daughter of Okeanos... were joined in love; and in the grey sea were born Nereids.\"", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [1932, "ENT_DORIS", "paired_with", "ENT_NEREUS", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 240-241.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [1977, "ENT_CALYPSO", "paired_with", "ENT_ODYSSEUS", "high", "Homer Odyssey 1.49-57; 5.55-270: Calypso detains Odysseus on her island Ogygia for seven years, desiring to make him her immortal husband.", "SRC_HOMER_ILIAD_ODYSSEY", "approved", null], [1978, "ENT_ARETHUSA", "paired_with", "ENT_ALPHEUS", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.4.5 (scholiast context): Arethusa was pursued by the river Alpheus and transformed into a spring by Artemis; tradition held the two waters mingled.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [2008, "ENT_HYPNOS", "paired_with", "ENT_THANATOS", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 211-212: Hypnos (Sleep) and Thanatos (Death) are twin brothers, sons of Nyx; Homer Iliad 16.672 depicts them carrying the body of Sarpedon together.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2012, "ENT_ZEUS", "paired_with", "ENT_GANYMEDE", "high", "Homer Iliad 20.232-235: Zeus loved Ganymede for his beauty and snatched him away to be cupbearer to the gods among the immortals.", "SRC_HOMER_ILIAD_ODYSSEY", "approved", null], [2018, "ENT_MAIA", "paired_with", "ENT_ZEUS", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 938-939; Homeric Hymn 4.3: Maia and Zeus are the divine parents of Hermes.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2019, "ENT_CYLLENE", "paired_with", "ENT_HERMES", "high", "Homeric Hymn 4 (To Hermes) 2: Hermes was born \"in a cave on Mount Cyllene\"; the mountain nymph Kyllene is associated with his birth.", "SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS", "approved", null], [2027, "ENT_PHORCYS", "paired_with", "ENT_CETO", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 270-336: Phorkys and Keto are siblings who unite to produce the Phorcides (Graiai, Gorgons, etc.) \u2014 described as monstrous in appearance.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2028, "ENT_CETO", "paired_with", "ENT_PHORCYS", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 270-336.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2052, "ENT_EOS", "paired_with", "ENT_TITHONUS", "high", "Homeric Hymn 5 (To Aphrodite) 218-238: Eos abducted Tithonus and begged Zeus to grant him immortality; she forgot to ask for eternal youth.", "SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS", "approved", null], [2053, "ENT_TITHONUS", "paired_with", "ENT_EOS", "high", "Homeric Hymn 5.218-238.", "SRC_HOMERIC_HYMNS", "approved", null], [2054, "ENT_DIONYSUS", "paired_with", "ENT_ARIADNE", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 947-949: Dionysus chose Ariadne as his wife after Theseus abandoned her on Naxos; she was made his flourishing consort.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2055, "ENT_ARIADNE", "paired_with", "ENT_DIONYSUS", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 947-949.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2057, "ENT_APOLLO", "paired_with", "ENT_DAPHNE", "high", "Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.4.1: Apollo fell in love with Daphne; she fled and was transformed into a laurel tree; the laurel became sacred to Apollo.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [2088, "ENT_EGY_TENEMU", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_TENEMUT", "high", "Tenemu and Tenemut are the masculine-feminine pair within the Ogdoad embodying primordial wandering/confusion; like all Ogdoad pairs they are conceptually inseparable.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "approved", null], [2089, "ENT_EGY_TENEMUT", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_TENEMU", "high", "See Tenemu paired_with Tenemut.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "approved", null], [2095, "ENT_EGY_MESKHENET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_SHAI", "high", "Meskhenet and Shai together determine human destiny at birth: Meskhenet presides over the birth brick and assigns the ba-character of the newborn; Shai determines their fate-term. Wilkinson, Complete Gods, p. 163.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "approved", null], [2099, "ENT_EGY_WOSRET", "paired_with", "ENT_EGY_AMUN", "high", "Wosret (\"The Powerful One\") was Amun's primary female consort at Thebes before Mut displaced her in the Middle Kingdom; she appears in early 12th Dynasty royal names alongside Amun. Wilkinson, Complete Gods, p. 148.", "SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS", "approved", null], [2101, "ENT_HTT_ARINNA", "paired_with", "ENT_HTT_TARHUNNA", "high", "Hoffner, Hittite Myths: the Sun Goddess of Arinna and the Storm God Tarhunna are the royal divine couple of the Hittite pantheon; she is \"Queen of Heaven and Earth\" and \"mistress of the Hittite lands.\"", "SRC_HOFFNER_HITTITE_MYTHS", "approved", null], [2102, "ENT_HTT_TARHUNNA", "paired_with", "ENT_HTT_ARINNA", "high", "Hoffner, Hittite Myths: see Arinna paired_with Tarhunna.", "SRC_HOFFNER_HITTITE_MYTHS", "approved", null], [2118, "ENT_GENEROSITY", "paired_with", "ENT_POVERTY", "medium", "Generosity and Poverty are complementary cross-traditional abstractions: generosity presupposes the giver's willingness to share; voluntary poverty (as in mendicant and Sufi traditions) is the rejection of surplus in favour of giving.", "SRC_BUTLER_SAINTS", "approved", null], [2119, "ENT_POVERTY", "paired_with", "ENT_GENEROSITY", "medium", "See ENT_GENEROSITY paired_with ENT_POVERTY.", "SRC_BUTLER_SAINTS", "approved", null], [2124, "ENT_ROM_QUIRINUS", "paired_with", "ENT_ROM_MARS", "high", "In the Archaic Roman triad (Iuppiter, Mars, Quirinus), Quirinus and Mars represent complementary aspects of the armed Roman citizen: Mars covers war and the soldier, Quirinus the civic identity of the Quirites at peace. Dum\u00e9zil, La Religion romaine archa\u00efque; SRC_LIVY_AUC.", "SRC_LIVY_AUC", "approved", null], [2125, "ENT_ROM_MARS", "paired_with", "ENT_ROM_QUIRINUS", "high", "See ENT_ROM_QUIRINUS paired_with ENT_ROM_MARS.", "SRC_LIVY_AUC", "approved", null], [2127, "ENT_VAL_ENNOIA", "paired_with", "ENT_VAL_BYTHOS", "high", "Irenaeus Adversus Haereses 1.1.1 (Valentinian system): before any emanation Bythos (the Forefather) existed with Ennoia (Thought) as his co-eternal consort; together they are the silent, pre-emanative dyad of the Pleroma.", "SRC_LAYTON_GNOSTIC", "approved", null], [2128, "ENT_VAL_ENNOIA", "paired_with", "ENT_VAL_SIGE", "high", "Ennoia (Thought) and Sige (Silence) are closely related and sometimes interchangeable in different Valentinian accounts; Layton, The Gnostic Scriptures, p. 277: in some systems Ennoia names the same first female principle called Sige in others.", "SRC_LAYTON_GNOSTIC", "approved", null], [2132, "ENT_AIDOS", "paired_with", "ENT_NEMESIS", "high", "Hesiod Works and Days 197-200: Aidos (Shame/Reverence) and Nemesis depart last from the earth as the iron age fails, always paired as the twin moral enforcers of social order.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2133, "ENT_NEMESIS", "paired_with", "ENT_AIDOS", "high", "See ENT_AIDOS paired_with ENT_NEMESIS; Hesiod Works and Days 197-200.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2137, "ENT_ARETE", "paired_with", "ENT_KAKIA", "high", "Prodicus's \"Choice of Heracles\" (preserved in Xenophon Memorabilia 2.1.21-34): Arete (Virtue/Excellence) and Kakia (Vice) appear to the young Heracles at a crossroads, each offering a different path.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [2138, "ENT_KAKIA", "paired_with", "ENT_ARETE", "high", "See ENT_ARETE paired_with ENT_KAKIA; Xenophon Memorabilia 2.1.21-34.", "SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY", "approved", null], [2140, "ENT_POINE", "paired_with", "ENT_NEMESIS", "high", "Poine (Punishment/Retribution) and Nemesis are closely related retributive daimons; Poine acts as the agent of specific punishments, Nemesis as the overarching principle of divine retribution.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2141, "ENT_PENIA", "paired_with", "ENT_POROS", "high", "Plato Symposium 203b: at the banquet of the gods, Penia (Poverty) and Poros (Resource) conceive Eros together; their union defines Eros as always between want and plenty.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2143, "ENT_HOMONOIA", "paired_with", "ENT_EIRENE", "high", "Homonoia (Concord/Agreement) and Eirene (Peace) are closely paired political and social virtues; they appear together in civic cult from the Classical period onward.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2144, "ENT_HEDONE", "paired_with", "ENT_POROS", "medium", "Hedone (Pleasure) and Poros (Resource/Plenty) are conceptually linked in the tradition of Eros born from Poros and Penia; Hedone represents one of the gifts of Poros.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2145, "ENT_ELPIS", "paired_with", "ENT_MOIRAI", "medium", "Hesiod Works and Days 96-98: when Pandora opened the jar, all evils scattered but Elpis (Hope) alone remained; the Moirai (Fates) determine the limits of hope as they do of all human life.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2146, "ENT_CAERUS", "paired_with", "ENT_TYCHE", "medium", "Caerus (Opportunity, the right moment) and Tyche (Fortune) are associated as paired daimones of chance and timing in Hellenistic philosophical and literary tradition.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2148, "ENT_EUSEBEIA", "paired_with", "ENT_AIDOS", "high", "Eusebeia (Piety/Reverence toward the gods) and Aidos (Reverence/Shame) are companion virtues in Greek ethical thought; both concern proper respect \u2014 for the divine and for social conventions respectively.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2155, "ENT_DOLOS", "paired_with", "ENT_APATE", "high", "Dolos (Trickery) and Apate (Deceit) are closely paired personifications of guile and deception; Apate is daughter of Nyx, and Dolos frequently appears alongside her in lists of evil daimons.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2158, "ENT_CORYCIA", "paired_with", "ENT_APOLLO", "high", "Corycia is the naiad of the Corycian Cave on Parnassus, which was sacred to both Apollo and the Muses; Pausanias Description of Greece 10.32.2 describes the cave as belonging to the Corycian nymphs.", "SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION", "approved", null], [2159, "ENT_CORYCIAN_NYMPHS", "paired_with", "ENT_APOLLO", "high", "Pausanias Description of Greece 10.32.2: the Corycian Cave above Delphi is the sanctuary of the Corycian nymphs and Pan; it was among the most notable cult sites of Apollo's mountain domain.", "SRC_PAUSANIAS_DESCRIPTION", "approved", null], [2168, "ENT_GELLO", "paired_with", "ENT_LAMIA", "medium", "Gello and Lamia are the two most prominent child-harming female spirits in Greek and Byzantine popular belief; they are often invoked together in apotropaic texts.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2169, "ENT_MORMO", "paired_with", "ENT_LAMIA", "medium", "Mormo and Lamia were paired in Greek literature as female bogeys used to frighten children; Theocritus and scholiasts treat them as interchangeable threats.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2172, "ENT_PHYLLIS", "paired_with", "ENT_DEMETER", "medium", "Phyllis, the Thracian princess who became a tree (almond or nut tree), belongs to the mythological cluster of vegetation and earth-renewal associated with Demeter; her transformation echoes Demeter's tree-spirit nymphs.", "SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES", "approved", null], [2178, "ENT_MUSES_HELICONIAN", "paired_with", "ENT_APOLLO", "high", "Hesiod Theogony 94-95: \"From the Muses and far-shooting Apollo are there singers and lyre-players upon the earth\"; the Heliconian Muses are paired with Apollo as co-patrons of music and poetry.", "SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY", "approved", null], [2179, "ENT_OREADS", "paired_with", "ENT_ARTEMIS", "high", "Homer Odyssey 6.102-109: Artemis is compared to a mountain nymph (Oread) and described leading them in the hunt; 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