{"database": "deitydb", "table": "entity_relationships", "is_view": false, "human_description_en": "where source_id = \"SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON\"", "rows": [[1478, "ENT_HTT_KUMARBI", "received_as", "ENT_KRONOS", "high", "The Kumarbi\u2192Kronos parallel is the centerpiece of West's (1997) argument for Near Eastern influence on Hesiod's Theogony. Both deities share an exact structural role: (1) they overthrow the ruling sky deity by biting/castrating the genitals (Kumarbi bites off Anu's genitals; Kronos castrates Ouranos with a sickle); (2) they absorb divine seed and become pregnant with the deity who will overthrow them; (3) they are themselves defeated by the storm deity son (Teshub/Zeus). This three-stage narrative is unique to the Kumarbi cycle among Near Eastern texts and uniquely explains why Hesiod's Theogony has the same three-stage structure. Transmission most likely via Anatolian-Greek contact in the 8th-7th c. BCE.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1479, "ENT_KRONOS", "reception_of", "ENT_HTT_KUMARBI", "high", "Kronos as the Greek reception of the Hurrian Kumarbi succession deity; the sky-god castration narrative in Hesiod's Theogony is best explained by the Kumarbi cycle tradition transmitted via Anatolian contact.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1480, "ENT_HTT_TESHUB", "received_as", "ENT_ZEUS", "high", "Teshub and Zeus share the role of the storm deity champion who defeats a monstrous adversary (Ullikummi/Typhon) and the usurper predecessor (Kumarbi/Kronos) to establish the current divine order. West (1997) documents that the narrative structure of Zeus's ascent in Hesiod's Theogony follows the Kumarbi cycle more closely than any other Near Eastern text. Both Teshub and Zeus also create an ordered cosmos out of the pre-existing chaos. The transmission pathway runs through Anatolian-Ionian Greek contact in the Archaic period.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1481, "ENT_ZEUS", "reception_of", "ENT_HTT_TESHUB", "high", "Zeus as the Greek reception of the Hurrian/Hittite Teshub tradition \u2014 the storm deity who defeats both the monstrous chaos figure and the preceding ruler to establish the current divine order.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1482, "ENT_HTT_ULLIKUMMI", "received_as", "ENT_TYPHON", "medium", "The Song of Ullikummi and Hesiod's Typhon narrative share the same plot structure: (1) the defeated predecessor deity (Kumarbi/defeated Titans, or Gaia acting on behalf of the old order) creates a monstrous adversary; (2) the monster grows to threaten heaven and challenge the storm god champion; (3) the champion (Teshub/Zeus) must struggle to defeat the monster. West (1997) pp. 300-302 makes this parallel explicit. In both myths, the monster's defeat marks the final establishment of the current divine order. Confidence medium because the narrative parallels are strong but the transmission mechanism is indirect (probably via Anatolian-Ionian contact rather than direct textual borrowing).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1483, "ENT_TYPHON", "reception_of", "ENT_HTT_ULLIKUMMI", "medium", "Typhon as the Greek reception of the Ullikummi tradition \u2014 the chaos monster created by the old order to challenge the new divine champion, whose defeat finally establishes cosmic order.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1484, "ENT_HTT_HEPAT", "received_as", "ENT_HERA", "medium", "Hepat and Hera share the role of queen of heaven and consort of the chief deity (Teshub/Zeus). At Yazilikaya, Hepat stands opposite Teshub as his divine equal \u2014 a role that parallels Hera's position as Zeus's queen. Hepat is also called \"queen of heaven\" (DINGIR.MAH or similar in Hittite texts) before the same title was applied to Hera and later to Isis and Mary. West (1997) includes the Hepat-Hera parallel among the Anatolian-Greek transmission chain, though with less textual specificity than the Kumarbi-Kronos pair.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1485, "ENT_HERA", "reception_of", "ENT_HTT_HEPAT", "medium", "Hera as the Greek reception of the Hurrian queen of heaven Hepat; shared role as wife and consort of the chief storm deity, and as queen of the divine assembly.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1488, "ENT_MES_ANU", "aligned_with", "ENT_OURANOS", "medium", "Functional/typological cognate (no attested diffusion of the Mesopotamian deity into the later cult); per Burkert/West the real transmission, where any, runs through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1489, "ENT_OURANOS", "aligned_with", "ENT_MES_ANU", "medium", "Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1492, "ENT_MES_ENLIL", "aligned_with", "ENT_ZEUS", "low", "Functional/typological cognate (no attested diffusion of the Mesopotamian deity into the later cult); per Burkert/West the real transmission, where any, runs through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1493, "ENT_ZEUS", "aligned_with", "ENT_MES_ENLIL", "low", "Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1496, "ENT_MES_ERESHKIGAL", "aligned_with", "ENT_PERSEPHONE", "medium", "Functional/typological cognate (no attested diffusion of the Mesopotamian deity into the later cult); per Burkert/West the real transmission, where any, runs through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1497, "ENT_PERSEPHONE", "aligned_with", "ENT_MES_ERESHKIGAL", "medium", "Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1498, "ENT_MES_APSU", "aligned_with", "ENT_OCEANUS", "medium", "Functional/typological cognate (no attested diffusion of the Mesopotamian deity into the later cult); per Burkert/West the real transmission, where any, runs through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1499, "ENT_OCEANUS", "aligned_with", "ENT_MES_APSU", "medium", "Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1532, "ENT_CAN_RESHEPH", "received_as", "ENT_APOLLO", "medium", "The Resheph\u2192Apollo transmission is one of the better-documented Levantine\u2192Greek deity parallels. Both share: (1) plague as primary domain \u2014 Resheph personifies pestilence (Hab. 3:5 has him flanking Yahweh alongside Deber/Plague); Apollo's arrows bring plague in the Iliad (1.43-52); (2) the bow as the weapon of disease; (3) a dual role sending AND ending plague (Apollo Apotropaios, the \"averter,\" parallels Resheph's role as the deity who could be propitiated to stop pestilence); (4) a Cypriot connection \u2014 Resheph was worshipped at Kition on Cyprus (bilingual Phoenician-Greek inscriptions call him \"Apollo\") and Cyprus was a major transmission node for Levantine\u2192Greek religious contact. West (1997) treats the Resheph-Apollo parallel as one of the most solidly attested Levantine\u2192Archaic Greek deity connections.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1533, "ENT_APOLLO", "reception_of", "ENT_CAN_RESHEPH", "medium", "Apollo as the Greek reception of the Levantine Resheph plague-deity complex; Cypriot bilingual inscriptions explicitly equate the two; bow-and-arrow plague, dual send/avert function, and Cypriot cult are the transmission vectors.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1534, "ENT_HTT_TELIPINU", "received_as", "ENT_DEMETER", "low", "The Telipinu vanishing-deity myth and the Demeter/Kore myth share the same narrative logic: (1) a deity associated with vegetation and fertility withdraws or disappears; (2) all crops, animals, and fertility fail during the absence; (3) the divine community searches and eventually recovers the missing deity; (4) fertility and life return with the deity's restoration. West (1997) identifies the Telipinu myth as the Hittite version of this pan-Near Eastern pattern, and treats it as a probable intermediate between the Mesopotamian Dumuzi/Tammuz dying-deity narrative and the Greek Demeter/Persephone myth. The transmission route would be through Anatolian-Greek contact in the Archaic period. Confidence low because the Telipinu myth has the deity vanishing in anger (not dying or being abducted), which is structurally slightly different from Persephone's abduction by Hades; the convergence is in the effect (vegetation fails) rather than the mechanism.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1535, "ENT_DEMETER", "aligned_with", "ENT_HTT_TELIPINU", "low", "Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1600, "ENT_MES_ENKI_EA", "aligned_with", "ENT_PROMETHEUS", "low", "Functional/typological cognate (no attested diffusion of the Mesopotamian deity into the later cult); per Burkert/West the real transmission, where any, runs through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries.", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"], [1601, "ENT_PROMETHEUS", "aligned_with", "ENT_MES_ENKI_EA", "low", "Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).", "SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_ARCHAIC"]], "truncated": false, "filtered_table_rows_count": 22, "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_WEST_EAST_HELICON"}}, "facet_results": {}, "suggested_facets": [{"name": "subject_entity_id", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON&_facet=subject_entity_id"}, {"name": "relationship_type", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON&_facet=relationship_type"}, {"name": "object_entity_id", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON&_facet=object_entity_id"}, {"name": "confidence", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON&_facet=confidence"}, {"name": "rationale", "toggle_url": "http://deitydb-explorer.fly.dev/deitydb/entity_relationships.json?source_id=SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON&_facet=rationale"}], "next": null, "next_url": null, "private": false, "allow_execute_sql": true, "query_ms": 325.8035850012675, "source": "jebboone/deitydb", "source_url": "https://github.com/jebboone/deitydb", "license": "MIT", "license_url": "https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT"}