relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1545,ENT_MES_NINSUN,parent_of,ENT_MES_GILGAMESH,high,"Ninsun is explicitly named as Gilgamesh's divine mother throughout the Epic; her divine nature is what makes Gilgamesh ""two-thirds divine"" and gives him his extraordinary strength and beauty. She appears in Tablets I-III as the interpreter of his dreams and the one who adopts Enkidu before their Cedar Forest journey.",SRC_GEORGE_GILGAMESH,reviewed,PER_MES_OLD_BAB 1546,ENT_MES_GILGAMESH,child_of,ENT_MES_NINSUN,high,Gilgamesh as son of the divine Ninsun; his two-thirds divine nature derives from her.,SRC_GEORGE_GILGAMESH,reviewed,PER_MES_OLD_BAB 1547,ENT_MES_GILGAMESH,paired_with,ENT_MES_ENKIDU,high,"Gilgamesh and Enkidu are the paradigm hero-companion pair in world literature; created to be Gilgamesh's equal, Enkidu becomes his closest companion; together they defeat Humbaba in the Cedar Forest and the Bull of Heaven; Enkidu's death is the pivotal event of the Epic that launches Gilgamesh on his quest for immortality.",SRC_GEORGE_GILGAMESH,reviewed,PER_MES_OLD_BAB 1548,ENT_MES_ENKIDU,paired_with,ENT_MES_GILGAMESH,high,Enkidu as Gilgamesh's equal companion; their relationship is the emotional core of the Epic.,SRC_GEORGE_GILGAMESH,reviewed,PER_MES_OLD_BAB 1549,ENT_MES_NINURTA,slays,ENT_MES_ANZU,high,"In the Anzu myth, Ninurta is the divine champion chosen by the assembly of gods to fight Anzu and recover the stolen Tablet of Destinies; after several failed attempts using conventional weapons (which Anzu deflects using the Tablet's power), Ninurta defeats Anzu through a strategy devised by Ea/Enki. This combat establishes Ninurta as the paradigm warrior deity in the Mesopotamian tradition.",SRC_BLACK_GREEN_MESO,reviewed,PER_MES_OLD_BAB