relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1482,ENT_HTT_ULLIKUMMI,received_as,ENT_TYPHON,medium,"The Song of Ullikummi and Hesiod's Typhon narrative share the same plot structure: (1) the defeated predecessor deity (Kumarbi/defeated Titans, or Gaia acting on behalf of the old order) creates a monstrous adversary; (2) the monster grows to threaten heaven and challenge the storm god champion; (3) the champion (Teshub/Zeus) must struggle to defeat the monster. West (1997) pp. 300-302 makes this parallel explicit. In both myths, the monster's defeat marks the final establishment of the current divine order. Confidence medium because the narrative parallels are strong but the transmission mechanism is indirect (probably via Anatolian-Ionian contact rather than direct textual borrowing).",SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON,reviewed,PER_GRK_ARCHAIC 1494,ENT_MES_TIAMAT,aligned_with,ENT_TYPHON,medium,"Functional/typological cognate (no attested diffusion of the Mesopotamian deity into the later cult); per Burkert/West the real transmission, where any, runs through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries.",SRC_BURKERT_ORIENT_REV,reviewed,PER_GRK_ARCHAIC 7865,ENT_MON_ECHIDNA,paired_with,ENT_TYPHON,high,"Hesiod, Theog. 306-308: Echidna couples with Typhon (Typhaon) to bear the monster brood. paired_with (not consort_of, which is not a valid type).",SRC_HESIOD_THEOGONY,reviewed, 8027,ENT_CHR_DEVIL,reception_of,ENT_TYPHON,medium,"Combat-myth (chaoskampf) dragon-adversary underlying the Christian dragon-Satan (Rev. 12); Forsyth, The Old Enemy.",SRC_FORSYTH_OLD_ENEMY,reviewed,PER_LATE_ANTIQUE