{"database": "deitydb", "table": "entity_relationships", "rows": [[1562, "ENT_MYC_ENYALIOS", "received_as", "ENT_ARES", "medium", "Pylos tablet PY Tn 316 \u2014 the most important Mycenaean religious text, listing offering recipients at a crisis moment before the palace's destruction c. 1180 BCE \u2014 lists both E-nu-wa-ri-jo (Enyalius) and A-re (Ares) as separate recipients, establishing they were distinct war deities in Mycenaean religion. In the Classical period, Enyalius (Enyalios) persists primarily as an epithet of Ares and as a battle-cry formula; however, some Classical sources still treat Enyalius as distinct (Pindar Olympian 13.102; the separate cult title at some sanctuaries). The transition from independent deity to epithet is the Mycenaean-to-Classical merger: Enyalius's identity and cult were absorbed into the dominant Ares figure in the post-Dark-Age consolidation of the Greek war-deity tradition.", "SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK", "reviewed", "PER_GRK_DARK_AGE"]], "columns": ["relationship_id", "subject_entity_id", "relationship_type", "object_entity_id", "confidence", "rationale", "source_id", "review_status", "period_id"], "primary_keys": ["relationship_id"], "primary_key_values": ["1562"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 0.8395900003961287, "source": "jebboone/deitydb", "source_url": "https://github.com/jebboone/deitydb", "license": "MIT", "license_url": "https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT"}