relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1458,ENT_EGY_HORUS,received_as,ENT_SYN_HARPOCRATES,high,"Harpocrates (Greek Harpokrates, ""Horus the Child"") is the direct Hellenistic reception of the child Horus (Hor-pa-khered), depicted in Egyptian art as an infant with finger to lips — a conventional Egyptian gesture indicating childhood. Greek visitors reinterpreted this as a gesture of silence, making Harpocrates the Greco-Egyptian god of silence and keeper of divine secrets. The figure appears extensively in Ptolemaic and Roman-period material culture; Plutarch (De Is. ch. 19) discusses him. The Horus-child-on-Isis's-lap iconography became the direct visual model for later representations of the Christ-child with the Virgin.",SRC_PLUTARCH_ISIS_OSIRIS,reviewed,PER_GRK_HELLENISTIC 5533,ENT_THL_HOOR_PAAR_KRAAT,reception_of,ENT_SYN_HARPOCRATES,high,Hoor-paar-kraat is the Thelemic form of the Greco-Egyptian Harpocrates.,SRC_CROWLEY_BOOK_OF_LAW,reviewed,