relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1558,ENT_MYC_POTNIA,received_as,ENT_ATHENA,high,"The Linear B tablet KN V 52 from Knossos reads ""a-ta-na po-ti-ni-ja"" — Athana Potnia, ""Lady Athena"" — making this the earliest certain attestation of the Greek goddess Athena, and establishing her origin within the Mycenaean Potnia tradition. The unqualified Potnia (""the Mistress"") is the generic form; ""Athana Potnia"" is the Knossos localization. This means Athena began as a Potnia-type great goddess and later differentiated from the Potnia collective into a distinct deity with her own name and iconographic identity in the post-Dark-Age period. Burkert (1985) treats this as one of the clearest cases of Mycenaean-to-Classical religious continuity.",SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,reviewed,PER_GRK_MYCENAEAN 1559,ENT_ATHENA,reception_of,ENT_MYC_POTNIA,high,"Athena as the Classical Greek differentiation of the Mycenaean Potnia tradition; ""Athana Potnia"" at Knossos KN V 52 is the earliest attestation; the goddess named and cult-defined independently in the post-Dark-Age period.",SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,reviewed,PER_GRK_MYCENAEAN 1560,ENT_MYC_DIWIA,received_as,ENT_DIONE,medium,"The Linear B di-u-ja (Diwia) and the Classical Dione share the same derivation: both are the transparent feminine form of the Zeus-name (Proto-Greek *Diw-os → Diwia in Linear B; Dios → Dione in Classical Greek, using the -ōnē suffix). Dione appears in Homer (Iliad 5.370-417) as Zeus's consort on Olympus, where she comforts Aphrodite after her wounding — a role that suggests she is a survival of an older tradition rather than a narrative creation. Her cult at Dodona (one of the oldest Greek oracular sanctuaries) as Zeus's consort preserves what the Linear B Diwia represents: a major independent goddess who was progressively subordinated as Zeus's divine sovereignty was consolidated in the post-Dark-Age period. Confidence medium rather than high because the continuous cult identity between Mycenaean Diwia and Classical Dione cannot be directly documented through texts.",SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,reviewed,PER_GRK_MYCENAEAN 1561,ENT_DIONE,reception_of,ENT_MYC_DIWIA,medium,Classical Dione as the Iron Age / Archaic survival of the Mycenaean Diwia (feminine Zeus); her role as Zeus's consort at Dodona preserves the older independent goddess status of the Linear B deity.,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,reviewed,PER_GRK_MYCENAEAN