{"database": "deitydb", "table": "entity_relationships", "is_view": false, "human_description_en": "where source_id = \"SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES\"", "rows": [[1510, "ENT_PHO_MELQART", "received_as", "ENT_HERACLES", "high", "The Melqart\u2192Heracles identification is one of the best-documented Phoenician\u2192Greek religious transmissions. Herodotus 2.44 explicitly states that he visited the Tyrian temple of Heracles, notes that it was far older than the Greek Heracles tradition, and concludes that there were \"two Heracleses\" \u2014 clearly distinguishing the Phoenician Melqart from the Greek hero. Melqart's attributes transmitted to Heracles include: (1) the lion-skin (Melqart depicted in lion garb in Phoenician iconography); (2) the club; (3) navigation and founding of colonies (Cadiz/Gadir was a Phoenician colony with a famous Melqart-Heracles sanctuary); (4) the dying-and-apotheosis narrative (Melqart's egersis \u2192 Heracles's immolation and apotheosis on Oeta). The identification was standard in the Greek world by the Archaic period.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1511, "ENT_HERACLES", "reception_of", "ENT_PHO_MELQART", "high", "Heracles as the Greek reception of Tyrian Melqart; Herodotus 2.44 documents the Phoenician original explicitly; lion-skin, club, colonial foundation, and dying-apotheosis narrative all transmit from Melqart to the Greek hero complex.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1574, "ENT_EGY_NEITH", "received_as", "ENT_ATHENA", "high", "Herodotus explicitly equates Neith with Athena in two passages: at 2.28 he identifies the goddess of Sais as Athena, and at 2.59 he names the great festival at Sais as belonging to Athena (= Neith). The equation is supported by shared attributes: both are warrior goddesses associated with weaving, wisdom, and craftsmanship; both have the owl as a sacred animal in some traditions; both are depicted with shield and spear. The famous inscription at Sais \u2014 \"I am all that has been, and is, and shall be, and none among mortals has yet uncovered my robe\" \u2014 was transmitted to the Greek world through this Neith-Athena identification. The identification is one of the best-documented Egyptian\u2192Greek deity equations in the ancient sources.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD"], [1575, "ENT_ATHENA", "reception_of", "ENT_EGY_NEITH", "high", "Athena as the Greek reception of the Egyptian Neith of Sais; Herodotus 2.28, 2.59 make the identification explicit; shared warrior-weaver-wisdom attributes.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD"], [1576, "ENT_EGY_PTAH", "received_as", "ENT_HEPHAESTUS", "high", "Herodotus explicitly equates Ptah with Hephaestus at 3.37, where he refers to the temple of Ptah at Memphis as the temple of Hephaestus: \"the temple of Hephaestus\" (= Ptah) at Memphis is where Cambyses committed his sacrilege. Memphis itself was sometimes called \"Hephaestia\" by Greek writers. The equation rests on shared craftsmanship and creation attributes: Ptah is the divine craftsman and creator-by-word in Egyptian theology; Hephaestus is the divine craftsman and smith of the Greek pantheon. Both are associated with fire, metalwork, and the creative power to fashion divine objects. The identification was widespread in the Ptolemaic and Roman periods.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD"], [1577, "ENT_HEPHAESTUS", "reception_of", "ENT_EGY_PTAH", "high", "Hephaestus as the Greek reception of the Egyptian Ptah; Herodotus 3.37 explicit; shared craftsman-creator attributes; Memphis = \"Hephaestia\" in Greek usage.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD"], [1578, "ENT_EGY_MIN", "received_as", "ENT_PAN", "high", "Herodotus makes the Min-Pan identification explicit at 2.46: \"in Egypt, Pan is reckoned one of the eight gods who are of the earliest rank\" \u2014 this refers to Min, the ithyphallic deity of Coptos and Akhmim, who was identified by Greek visitors as Pan. The equation rests on: (1) Min's conspicuous ithyphallism, which Greek observers associated with Pan's fertility and sexuality; (2) Min's association with the desert and with wild spaces parallel to Pan's domain; (3) the Egyptian goat cult at Mendes that Herodotus also describes in 2.46 may have reinforced the equation via the goat association of Pan. The identification became standard in the Ptolemaic and Roman periods; the Greco-Roman city of Akhmim (ancient Ipu/Khent-Abt, Min's cult center) was called Panopolis (City of Pan) by the Greeks.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD"], [1579, "ENT_PAN", "reception_of", "ENT_EGY_MIN", "high", "Pan as the Greek reception of the Egyptian Min; Herodotus 2.46 explicit; ithyphallic fertility deity equation; Min's city Akhmim became Panopolis in the Greco-Roman period.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD"], [1639, "ENT_SCYTH_TABITI", "equated_with", "ENT_HESTIA", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59.2: \"Hestia they call Tabiti\" \u2014 explicit equation; Tabiti as fire-goddess is the most natural parallel to Hestia", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_SCYTH_ARCHAIC"], [1640, "ENT_SCYTH_PAPAEUS", "equated_with", "ENT_ZEUS", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59.2: \"Zeus Papaeus\" \u2014 Herodotus notes this equation with unusual approbation (\"very rightly in my judgment\")", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_SCYTH_ARCHAIC"], [1641, "ENT_SCYTH_API", "equated_with", "ENT_GAIA", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59.2: \"Earth Api\" \u2014 explicit equation; Api as earth-wife of Papaeus/Zeus", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_SCYTH_ARCHAIC"], [1642, "ENT_SCYTH_PAPAEUS", "spouse_of", "ENT_SCYTH_API", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59.2: \"Earth they regard as the wife of Zeus [Papaeus]\" \u2014 the Scythian cosmological pair", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_SCYTH_ARCHAIC"], [1643, "ENT_SCYTH_API", "spouse_of", "ENT_SCYTH_PAPAEUS", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59.2: Api is wife of Papaeus (Zeus-equivalent) in the Scythian cosmology", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_SCYTH_ARCHAIC"], [2110, "ENT_SCYTH_ARTIMPASA", "equated_with", "ENT_APHRODITE", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59: the Scythians call Aphrodite Urania (Heavenly Aphrodite) \"Artimpasa\"; she is one of the primary Scythian deities.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "approved", null], [2112, "ENT_SCYTH_OETOSYRUS", "equated_with", "ENT_APOLLO", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59: the Scythians identify their god Oetosyrus (also spelled Goitosyrus) with Apollo; he is a solar and arrow deity.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "approved", null], [2114, "ENT_SCYTH_SWORD_ARES", "equated_with", "ENT_ARES", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.62: each Scythian district maintained a mound of brushwood topped with an ancient iron sword (the akinakes) as the cult image of Ares; prisoners of war were sacrificed to it.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "approved", null], [2115, "ENT_SCYTH_SWORD_ARES", "embodies", "ENT_WAR", "high", "The Scythian Sword Ares is the direct embodiment of war itself \u2014 a naked blade worshipped as the divine instrument of battle; Herodotus 4.62.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "approved", null], [2116, "ENT_SCYTH_THAGIMASADAS", "equated_with", "ENT_POSEIDON", "high", "Herodotus Histories 4.59: only the Royal Scythians worship Thagimasadas, whom they identify with Poseidon; he is not sacrificed to by common Scythians.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "approved", null], [2317, "ENT_SABAZIOS", "syncretized_with", "ENT_DIONYSUS", "high", "Herodotus 5.7 names Dionysus as one of the three Thracian gods; scholarship consistently identifies the Thracian ecstatic mystery deity in this position as Sabazios. Aristophanes mocks the Sabazian cult alongside Dionysian rites (Wasps 9-10; Birds 874). The identification is ancient and widespread. Archibald (1998) ch. 8.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [2319, "ENT_THRA_ZALMOXIS", "patron_of", "ENT_DEAD", "high", "The core of the Zalmoxis cult as reported by Herodotus 4.94-95: the Getae believe they do not die but go to Zalmoxis, who is their deity of immortality and afterlife. The four-year messenger ritual (throwing a man onto spears to communicate with Zalmoxis) confirms his role as the sovereign of the dead and the revealer of immortality. Herodotus 4.94-96.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [2321, "ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS", "patron_of", "ENT_STORM", "high", "Herodotus 4.94: the Getae shoot arrows at the sky to threaten Gebeleizis during thunderstorms, identifying him as the sky/storm deity. The act of threatening the deity with arrows during storms is the clearest possible attestation of his function as lord of storm and thunder.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [2322, "ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS", "aligned_with", "ENT_ZEUS", "medium", "Gebeleizis is a sky-thunder deity of the Getae, functionally parallel to Zeus as the Greek sky-father and thunderer. The interpretatio Graeca structure (Herodotus reporting Thracian gods via Greek divine categories) supports this alignment. Confidence medium: structural parallel is clear; no surviving ancient explicit equation.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [2396, "ENT_ARA_ALLAT", "received_as", "ENT_APHRODITE", "high", "Herodotus (Histories 3.8, c. 430 BCE) is the earliest and most explicit ancient equation of an Arabian goddess with a Greek one: he names the two Arabian deities as \"Orotalt\" (= Dushara/Allah) and \"Alilat\" (= Al-Lat), and explicitly states \"Alilat is the same as Aphrodite.\" He specifies Aphrodite Ourania (Heavenly Aphrodite), the celestial aspect of Aphrodite associated with the morning star / Venus \u2014 the precise identification that connects Al-Lat to the Venus goddess tradition spanning Inanna/Ishtar (Mesopotamian), Astarte (Canaanite/Phoenician), and Aphrodite (Greek). Herodotus's account predates the Nabataean kingdom proper (which emerges as a distinct polity c. 4th c. BCE) and documents the pre-Nabataean north Arabian goddess tradition. The existing Athena equation (ENT_ARA_ALLAT received_as ENT_ATHENA) reflects the later Palmyrene period identification; the Aphrodite equation via Herodotus is the earlier and more widespread ancient testimony. SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES 3.8.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_ARA_PRE_ISLAMIC"], [2397, "ENT_APHRODITE", "reception_of", "ENT_ARA_ALLAT", "high", "In Herodotus's interpretatio graeca (Histories 3.8), the Greek understanding of Aphrodite Ourania (Heavenly Aphrodite) was identified with the north Arabian goddess Alilat/Al-Lat \u2014 one of the earliest documented Greek-Arabian divine equations. This reflects the ancient perception that Aphrodite Ourania and the Arabian great goddess shared the celestial Venus/morning-star domain. The relationship is consistent with the broader Semitic great goddess complex (Astarte, Inanna/Ishtar, Al-Uzza, Al-Lat) all sharing the Venus star identification. SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES 3.8.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_ARA_PRE_ISLAMIC"], [2451, "ENT_THRA_ZALMOXIS", "aligned_with", "ENT_DIONYSUS", "medium", "Herodotus (Hist. IV.95) preserves a tradition that Zalmoxis was a disciple of Pythagoras (almost certainly a later rationalizing legend), and Plato (Charmides 156d-157c) references Zalmoxis in the context of holistic healing and soul medicine. The structural parallel with Dionysus lies in the mystery cult form: both figures are associated with initiatory rites promising immortality or a blessed afterlife, both involve a period of disappearance and return (Zalmoxis's three-year underground sojourn; Dionysian dismemberment and return), and both cults are attested in the same Thracian-Greek cultural contact zone. Ancient writers (Mnaseas of Patrae via Diodorus Siculus) sometimes directly equated Zalmoxis with the Kronos of mystery traditions. Confidence medium: the parallel is structural and contextual rather than attested by explicit ancient identification.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [2452, "ENT_DAC_DERZELAS", "aligned_with", "ENT_THRA_ZALMOXIS", "medium", "Derzelas and Zalmoxis share the chthonic-vitalistic function characteristic of Dacian-Thracian religion: Zalmoxis promises immortality and receives the dead in his underground hall; Derzelas presides over vital abundance and health with a chthonic dimension. Both are attested in the Thracian-Dacian cultural zone and represent the indigenous Dacian synthesis of chthonic death-power with vital life-force. The alignment is functional and regional rather than attested by an explicit ancient identification. Popov (1989) discusses Derzelas's chthonic dimension in relation to the broader Thracian divine complex.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [2453, "ENT_DAC_DERZELAS", "aligned_with", "ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS", "low", "Gebeleizis (storm deity) and Derzelas (chthonic abundance deity) together represent the major functional poles of the Dacian/Getae divine world: celestial/storm and chthonic/abundance. This is a structurally inferred pairing \u2014 the Thracian divine complex typically features a storm deity (Gebeleizis) paired with a chthonic deity (Derzelas/Zalmoxis) \u2014 rather than an explicit ancient identification. Confidence low: the pair is modern scholarly reconstruction of the Dacian religious system.", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", "PER_THRA_IRON_AGE"], [6001, "ENT_PHO_MELQART", "equated_with", "ENT_HERACLES", "high", "Melqart of Tyre was identified with Heracles throughout the Greco-Roman world (Herodotus 2.44, the 'Tyrian Heracles').", "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES", "reviewed", null]], "truncated": false, "filtered_table_rows_count": 28, "expanded_columns": [], "expandable_columns": [[{"column": "period_id", "other_table": "periods", "other_column": "period_id"}, "period_name"], [{"column": "source_id", "other_table": "sources", "other_column": "source_id"}, "title"], [{"column": "object_entity_id", "other_table": "entities", "other_column": "entity_id"}, "canonical_name"], [{"column": "relationship_type", "other_table": "relationship_types", "other_column": "relationship_type"}, "relationship_type"], [{"column": "subject_entity_id", "other_table": "entities", "other_column": "entity_id"}, "canonical_name"]], "columns": ["relationship_id", "subject_entity_id", "relationship_type", "object_entity_id", "confidence", "rationale", "source_id", "review_status", "period_id"], "primary_keys": ["relationship_id"], "units": {}, "query": {"sql": "select relationship_id, subject_entity_id, relationship_type, object_entity_id, confidence, rationale, source_id, review_status, period_id from entity_relationships where \"source_id\" = :p0 order by relationship_id limit 101", "params": {"p0": "SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES"}}, "facet_results": {}, "suggested_facets": [{"name": "subject_entity_id", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES&_facet=subject_entity_id"}, {"name": "relationship_type", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES&_facet=relationship_type"}, {"name": "object_entity_id", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES&_facet=object_entity_id"}, {"name": "confidence", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES&_facet=confidence"}, {"name": "review_status", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES&_facet=review_status"}, {"name": "period_id", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES&_facet=period_id"}], "next": null, "next_url": null, "private": false, "allow_execute_sql": true, "query_ms": 14.268356999991738, "source": "jebboone/deitydb", "source_url": "https://github.com/jebboone/deitydb", "license": "MIT", "license_url": "https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT"}