relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 522,ENT_CAN_ANAT,paired_with,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,Anat is closely associated with Baal in Ugaritic myth.,SRC_UGARIT_DDD,reviewed, 1507,ENT_PHO_MELQART,reception_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"Melqart as the Iron Age Phoenician city-specific reception of the Bronze Age Baal/Hadad storm and kingship deity; the ""Baal of Tyre"" in Iron Age Israelite texts.",SRC_MARKOE_PHOENICIANS,reviewed,PER_PHO_IRON_AGE 1530,ENT_CAN_DAGON,parent_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"KTU 1.5 VI 24 (Baal Cycle, Ugarit) calls Baal ""son of Dagon"" (bn dgn). This parentage is attested in several Ugaritic texts alongside the alternative tradition that makes El Baal's father; Cross (1973) and Wyatt (2002) treat the Dagon-paternity as authentic, noting that Dagon's older Levantine authority made him a plausible divine father for the younger storm deity. The identification of Dagon as the ""father"" of the storm god parallels the Mesopotamian pattern where older grain/sky deities are the fathers of more active storm deities.",SRC_WYATT_RELIGIOUS_TEXTS,reviewed,PER_CAN_BRONZE_AGE 2315,ENT_MOA_KEMOSH,reception_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"Kemosh shares significant traits with Baal Hadad — war deity, storm associations, divine anger, conflict theology — and likely inherits his divine typology from the broader West Semitic Baal tradition. The Mesha Stele's rhetorical structure (divine anger → defeat → divine favour → victory) mirrors Baal-cycle theological grammar. Cross (1973) p. 229 notes Kemosh's Baal-type features. Classified medium: the dependence is typological, not directly attested.",SRC_CROSS_CANAANITE_MYTH,reviewed,PER_TRANSJORDAN_IRON_AGE 2381,ENT_ARA_BAALSHAMIN,aligned_with,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"Baalshamin (""Lord of Heaven"") and Baal Hadad (""Lord/Storm"") are related but distinct deities in the Semitic tradition. Both are Baal-titles applied to sky/storm deities, but Baalshamin emphasizes the heavenly-sovereignty aspect while Baal Hadad emphasizes the storm-violence aspect. The distinction is made in Iron Age inscriptions (e.g., the Panamuwa inscription from Sam'al/Zinjirli invokes both Hadad and Baalshamin as distinct deities in the same text), demonstrating they were not simply identical. Confidence medium: the relationship is theological (two Baal-figures in the same tradition) rather than identity or explicit equation. Lipiński (2000) p. 583.",SRC_LIPINSKI_ARAMEANS,reviewed,PER_ARA_IRON_AGE 2382,ENT_ARA_HADAD_DAMASCUS,reception_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,"Aramean Hadad of Damascus is the direct continuation of the Canaanite Baal Hadad tradition — the same deity name (Hadad is the proper name of Canaanite Baal) carried forward into the Iron Age Aramean states. The theonym Hadad (Aramaic hdd, ""thunderer"") directly corresponds to Ugaritic Haddu, the personal name of Baal. The transition from Bronze Age Canaanite cult to Iron Age Aramean state cult represents a reception: the same storm deity, reorganized as the national patron of the Aramean kingdom of Damascus, receiving royal inscriptions and military victory dedications in Aramaic rather than Ugaritic. Lipiński (2000) pp. 567-569.",SRC_LIPINSKI_ARAMEANS,reviewed,PER_ARA_IRON_AGE 3484,ENT_CAN_PIDRAY,child_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,Daughter of Baal.,SRC_KTU,reviewed, 3485,ENT_CAN_TALLAY,child_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,Daughter of Baal.,SRC_KTU,reviewed, 3486,ENT_CAN_ARSAY,child_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,Daughter of Baal.,SRC_KTU,reviewed, 3491,ENT_CAN_ATHTAR,opposes,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,Enthroned to replace the dead Baal but proves too small.,SRC_SMITH_UGARITIC_BAAL,reviewed, 3495,ENT_PHO_BAAL_SAPHON,cult_form_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,A Phoenician cult-form of Baal Hadad of Mount Saphon.,SRC_KAI,reviewed, 3641,ENT_PHO_BAAL_SHAMEM,aligned_with,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"Baal-Shamem, ""Lord of Heaven,"" a supreme Baal.",SRC_PHILO_BYBLOS,reviewed, 4514,ENT_GOE_BAEL,reception_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,high,Bael is the demonized form of the Canaanite storm-god Baal.,SRC_LEMEGETON,reviewed, 7364,ENT_ROM_JUPITER_DOLICHENUS,syncretized_with,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"The underlying figure of Jupiter Dolichenus is the Commagenian storm-god of Doliche, a Baal-Hadad type; he is syncretized with the Canaanite/Syrian storm-god Baal Hadad.",SRC_BEARD_ROMAN_RELIGIONS,reviewed, 7365,ENT_ROM_JUPITER_HELIOPOLITANUS,syncretized_with,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,"Jupiter Heliopolitanus is the Romanized Baal/Hadad of Heliopolis (Baalbek), syncretizing the local Syrian storm-god with Jupiter.",SRC_BEARD_ROMAN_RELIGIONS,reviewed, 7402,ENT_LEV_BAAL_ZEBUB,cult_form_of,ENT_CAN_BAAL,medium,Baal-Zebub of Ekron is a local Philistine cult form of the wider Canaanite storm-god Baal Hadad (ENT_CAN_BAAL); 'Zebub' likely garbles the Ugaritic Baal epithet 'zbl/Zebul' ('Prince').,SRC_DDD_BIBLE,reviewed,