relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1539,ENT_CAN_ASTARTE,received_as,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,low,"The South Arabian Athtar and the Canaanite Astarte/Ugaritic ʿAttar share the same etymological root (the proto-Semitic *ʿAttar- base) and the planet Venus as their primary celestial association. The Ugaritic ʿAttar (masculine) who temporarily sits on Baal's throne and is deemed too small for it (KTU 1.6 I 53-65) represents the masculine form of the Venus deity that South Arabian Athtar preserves. The gender divergence — Astarte is female, Athtar is male — reflects either an early Semitic tradition that was later feminized in the Levantine context, or independent masculine and feminine developments from a common ancestral deity. Cross (1973) treats them as related variants of the same root deity. Confidence low: the name cognate is certain; the precise transmission direction and mechanism are debated.",SRC_CROSS_CANAANITE_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SABAEAN 1544,ENT_ARA_AL_UZZA,reception_of,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,low,Al-Uzza as the North Arabian reception of the Venus deity tradition from the broader Semitic world including South Arabian Athtar; feminized form of the masculine South Arabian Venus deity.,SRC_HOYLAND_ARABIA,reviewed,PER_ARA_PRE_ISLAMIC 3494,ENT_CAN_ATHTAR,aligned_with,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,medium,The Ugaritic and South Arabian Athtar are reflexes of the common Semitic Venus-god.,SRC_SMITH_UGARITIC_BAAL,reviewed, 4359,ENT_AKS_ASTAR,equated_with,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,high,Aksumite Astar is the reflex of South-Arabian ʿAthtar.,SRC_MUNRO_HAY_AKSUM,reviewed,