relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1524,ENT_ARA_MANAT,received_as,ENT_NEMESIS,low,"Manat (from Arabic mana, ""to apportion"" or ""fate"") presides over the apportionment of destiny and death; she is associated with the moon and with the inevitable fate that awaits all human beings. Nemesis (Greek goddess of retribution and the apportionment of fortune/fate) shares the function of inevitable, apportioned fate. The Nabataean Manat was identified with Greek fate/retribution deities in the Hellenistic period; at Madain Salih (Hegra) inscriptions attest her alongside Dushara. Confidence low: the functional parallel is reasonable but no explicit ancient identification of Manat with Nemesis (as opposed to Tyche or another fate deity) is documented in surviving texts.",SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,reviewed,PER_GRK_HELLENISTIC 2132,ENT_AIDOS,paired_with,ENT_NEMESIS,high,"Hesiod Works and Days 197-200: Aidos (Shame/Reverence) and Nemesis depart last from the earth as the iron age fails, always paired as the twin moral enforcers of social order.",SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY,approved, 2140,ENT_POINE,paired_with,ENT_NEMESIS,high,"Poine (Punishment/Retribution) and Nemesis are closely related retributive daimons; Poine acts as the agent of specific punishments, Nemesis as the overarching principle of divine retribution.",SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES,approved,