entity_id,period_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status ENT_LYD_ARTIMUS,PER_LYDIAN,high,"Lydian goddess attested in Lydian inscriptions (frequently paired with Pldans), regularly equated with Greek Artemis; her cult is prominent at Sardis and Ephesus' Anatolian background. Munn (2006); Lydian epigraphic corpus.",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_BAKIVALIS,PER_LYDIAN,high,Lydian theonym/theophoric element (Baki-) reflecting a Dionysus-type wine and ecstatic-cult deity; the Lydian-Phrygian Bakkhos sphere from which the Greek epithet Bakchos is partly drawn. Attestation chiefly onomastic. Munn (2006).,SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_KANDAULES,PER_LYDIAN,high,"Lydian divine epithet 'Kandaules' (the 'dog-throttler'), reported by Hipponax as a Lydian title of Hermes; also the throne-name of the last Heraclid king of Sardis (Herodotus 1.7ff). A Hermes-type guardian/psychopomp figure. Munn (2006).",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_KUVAVA,PER_LYDIAN,high,"The Lydian mother-goddess, attested in Lydian inscriptions as Kuvava and in Greek as Kybebe (Herodotus 5.102; Hipponax names her at Sardis). Descended from the Luwian/Neo-Hittite Kubaba of Carchemish and ancestral to the Phrygian/Greek Cybele; central to Munn's account of Anatolian divine sovereignty. Distinct local form, not the Phrygian Matar.",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_LAMETRUS,PER_LYDIAN,high,"Lydian goddess attested in inscriptions, identified with Greek Demeter through both name and agrarian function. Reflects the shared Anatolian-Greek grain-mother substrate. Munn (2006); Lydian epigraphy.",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_PANTHEON,PER_LYDIAN,high,"Collective hub for the deities of the Iron Age Lydian kingdom (Sardis, c. 1200-540 BCE), attested in Lydian-language inscriptions, theophoric names, and Greek sources (Herodotus, Hipponax). Munn (2006).",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_PLDANS,PER_LYDIAN,high,"Lydian god named in inscriptions (paired with Artimus in protective formulae), conventionally identified with Greek Apollo on phonetic and functional grounds. Attestation is epigraphic and partly conjectural. Munn (2006).",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed ENT_LYD_SANTAS,PER_LYDIAN,high,"Lydian war- and plague-god, the Anatolian Sandon/Sandas figure interpreted by Greeks as a Heracles. Munn connects him to Lydian dynastic ancestry (the Tylonid/Heraclid line at Sardis); continuous with the Luwian Santa and Cilician Sandas. Attested via theophoric onomastics and the Greek Herakles-equation.",SRC_MUNN_MOTHER_GODS,reviewed