relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 494,ENT_MES_ADAD_ISHKUR,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,Adad/Ishkur is a major storm god.,SRC_BLACK_GREEN_MESO,reviewed, 518,ENT_CAN_BAAL,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,Baal Hadad is the central Northwest Semitic storm god.,SRC_UGARIT_DDD,reviewed, 827,ENT_CEL_TARANIS,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,Taranis is a thunder/storm god.,SRC_GREEN_CELTIC_GODS,reviewed, 864,ENT_NOR_THOR,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,Thor is a thunder/storm god.,SRC_SIMEK_NORTHERN_MYTH,reviewed, 2304,ENT_SLAV_PERUN,embodies,ENT_STORM,high,Perun is the divine personification of the thunderstorm; his cult is centred on lightning as a divine force striking chaos from the sky. PVL AD 980.,SRC_PRIMARY_CHRONICLE_PVL,reviewed,PER_SLAV_PAGAN 2305,ENT_MOA_KEMOSH,patron_of,ENT_STORM,medium,"Kemosh's warrior function and Hellenistic equation with Ares suggest a storm/war deity typology; not directly described as a storm deity in surviving Moabite sources but inferred from the divine anger / lightning metaphor pattern in the Mesha Stele. DDD Bible ""Chemosh"" entry.",SRC_DDD_BIBLE,reviewed,PER_TRANSJORDAN_IRON_AGE 2321,ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Herodotus 4.94: the Getae shoot arrows at the sky to threaten Gebeleizis during thunderstorms, identifying him as the sky/storm deity. The act of threatening the deity with arrows during storms is the clearest possible attestation of his function as lord of storm and thunder.",SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES,reviewed,PER_THRA_IRON_AGE 2339,ENT_FINN_UKKO,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Ukko is the Finnish thunder and storm deity; Agricola 1551 states he ""ruled weather and the air."" The Kalevala invokes Ukko whenever a storm or lightning is needed. His primary domain is control of thunder, lightning, and rain. Agricola 1551.",SRC_AGRICOLA_PRIMER,reviewed,PER_FINN_TRADITIONAL 2352,ENT_URA_TEISHEBA,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Teisheba is explicitly the storm and thunder deity of Urartu, called ""lord of the sky"" in Urartian inscriptions. The city Teishebaini (""city of Teisheba,"" modern Karmir Blur) takes its name from his storm-deity function. He is the direct successor of Hurrian Teshub in the Urartian theological system. Piotrovsky (1969) pp. 95-100.",SRC_PIOTROVSKY_URARTU,reviewed,PER_URA_IRON_AGE 2379,ENT_ARA_BAALSHAMIN,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Baalshamin is explicitly the deity of the heavens and weather — rain, storm, and cosmic sovereignty over the sky. As ""Lord of Heaven"" his storm/rain patronage is his primary inscriptional function: the Zakkur stele (c. 800 BCE) shows him intervening in a military crisis through prophetic oracles, but his core domain is the sky and its weather functions. The storm-deity role is consistently attested across Aramean and Palmyrene sources. Lipiński (2000) pp. 577-580; Kaizer (2002) p. 62.",SRC_LIPINSKI_ARAMEANS,reviewed,PER_ARA_IRON_AGE 2383,ENT_ARA_HADAD_DAMASCUS,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Hadad of Damascus is explicitly the storm deity of the Aramean kingdom — the Aramaic name ""Hadad"" means ""thunderer,"" and his function in inscriptions and the OT accounts of the Damascene kings is consistently as the storm god who gives rain and grants military victory. The Melqart stele inscription invokes Hadad's divine favor; the royal epithets Ben-Hadad (""son of Hadad"") and Hadadezer (""Hadad is my help"") confirm his storm-patronage as the basis of royal legitimacy. Lipiński (2000) pp. 570-572.",SRC_LIPINSKI_ARAMEANS,reviewed,PER_ARA_IRON_AGE 2472,ENT_BALT_PERKUNAS,embodies,ENT_STORM,high,"Perkūnas is the Baltic thunder/storm god (Lith. Perkūnas, Latv. Pērkons), the cognate of Slavic Perun and the Indo-European thunder deity.",SRC_GIMBUTAS_BALTS,reviewed, 2493,ENT_ETR_TINIA,embodies,ENT_STORM,high,Tinia is the Etruscan sky and thunder god who hurls the lightning bolts; the Piacenza Liver maps his celestial domain and he heads the council that casts the three kinds of thunderbolt.,SRC_DEGRUMMOND_ETRUSCAN,reviewed, 3960,ENT_MES_UGALLU,presides_over,ENT_STORM,high,"The Big Weather-Beast, a lion-headed storm demon",SRC_BLACK_GREEN_MESO,reviewed, 3965,ENT_JM_ZAPHIEL,presides_over,ENT_STORM,high,Prince over the storm-wind,SRC_3_ENOCH,reviewed, 3966,ENT_JM_RAAMIEL,presides_over,ENT_STORM,medium,Prince over the thunders,SRC_3_ENOCH,reviewed, 3974,ENT_ISR_BARAQIEL,presides_over,ENT_STORM,medium,In 3 Enoch 14 also the prince over the lightnings,SRC_3_ENOCH,reviewed, 4327,ENT_ARAB_QUZAH,presides_over,ENT_STORM,high,Storm/rainbow deity; qaws Quzaḥ ('Quzaḥ's bow' = rainbow) preserves his domain.,SRC_HOYLAND_ARABIA,reviewed, 4429,ENT_THRA_ZIBELTHIURDOS,presides_over,ENT_STORM,high,A thunder-and-lightning storm god equated with Zeus/Jupiter in Roman-period inscriptions.,SRC_HODDINOTT_THRACIANS,reviewed,