relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 2300,ENT_SLAV_PERUN,aligned_with,ENT_BALT_PERKUNAS,high,"Perun and Perkūnas are cognate thunder deities: same PIE *perkʷ- root, same cosmic myth structure (vs. Veles/Velnias), same oak cult, same role as divine guarantor of oaths. The Slavic-Baltic parallel is one of the most secure in Indo-European comparative mythology. Greimas (1992) pp. 77-84; Brückner (1918) pp. 67-80.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SLAV_PAGAN 2301,ENT_SLAV_VELES,aligned_with,ENT_BALT_VELNIAS,high,"Veles and Velnias are cognate chthonic deities: cognate names (PIE *wel-, the dead), same underworld governance, same cattle/wealth domain, same antagonism to the thunder deity. Brückner (1918) pp. 138-155; Greimas (1992) pp. 121-150.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SLAV_PAGAN 2302,ENT_SLAV_PERUN,aligned_with,ENT_NOR_THOR,high,"Perun and Thor are typologically parallel thunder deities: both wield the thunder weapon against a chaos serpent/giant, both protect cosmic order, both are oak-associated. The structural parallel (not etymological — different PIE roots) is well established in IE comparative mythology. Brückner (1918) pp. 67-80.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SLAV_PAGAN 2303,ENT_SLAV_MOKOSH,aligned_with,ENT_BALT_LAIMA,medium,"Mokosh and Laima are structurally parallel fate/weaving goddesses: both spin or weave the thread of fate, both govern birth and death, both are associated with women's domestic work. The parallel is functional, not etymological. Gimbutas (1963) p. 202; Brückner (1918) pp. 130-138.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SLAV_PAGAN 2400,ENT_SLAV_ROD,aligned_with,ENT_ZEUS,medium,"Rod functions as the supreme ancestral creator deity of the Slavic tradition — he governs birth, destiny, and divine ancestry — a structural role cognate with Zeus's position as sovereign sky-father. Medieval Russian ecclesiastical sources (the ""Words Against Paganism,"" 10th–12th century) attack the cult of ""Rod and the Rozhanitsy"" (Rod's feminine birth-fate companions) as a persistent rival to Christianity, suggesting Rod occupied the highest rung of the pre-Perun Slavic divine hierarchy. Rybakov (Yazychestvo drevnikh slavyan, 1981) identifies Rod as the primordial supreme deity of Slavic religion, whose cult was marginalized but not eliminated when Vladimir I elevated Perun to state pantheon head in 980 CE. The Zeus alignment is recognized in comparative Indo-European studies as the standard parallel for Slavic supreme creator deities. Confidence medium: the Rod alignment with Zeus is structural/comparative, not explicit in ancient sources; Rod's cult is reconstructed from anti-pagan polemical texts whose theological claims require critical filtration. Brückner (1918) s.v. ""Rod.""",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SLAV_PAGAN 2482,ENT_SLAV_VELES,dwells_in,ENT_UNDERWORLD,high,"Veles is the Slavic chthonic god, lord of the underworld, cattle, and the dead; his opposition to the celestial Perun is the core of the Slavic ""basic myth"".",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2483,ENT_SLAV_VELES,patron_of,ENT_MAGIC,high,"Veles is the god of magic, oaths, poetry, and cattle-wealth; oaths in the Rus'–Byzantine treaties are sworn by Perun and Veles.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2484,ENT_SLAV_DAZBOG,embodies,ENT_SUN,high,Dažbog is a Slavic solar deity of the 980 Kiev pantheon; the Hypatian gloss names him son of Svarog and a giver of the sun's light and bounty.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2485,ENT_SLAV_DAZBOG,patron_of,ENT_WEALTH,medium,"Dažbog (from dati, to give) is the ""giving god"", dispenser of fortune and material bounty; the Slavs are called ""Dažbog's grandsons"" in the Lay of Igor.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2487,ENT_SLAV_STRIBOG,embodies,ENT_WIND,high,"Stribog is the Slavic wind deity of the 980 Kiev pantheon; the Lay of Igor calls the winds ""Stribog's grandsons"" blowing from the sea.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2488,ENT_SLAV_MOKOSH,embodies,ENT_FATE,high,"Mokosh, the only goddess in the 980 Kiev pantheon, governs spinning, weaving, and women's fate — the thread-spinning fate function of the Slavic tradition.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2489,ENT_SLAV_MOKOSH,patron_of,ENT_FERTILITY,high,"Mokosh (Mat' Syra Zemlya, ""Moist Mother Earth"") is patroness of earth-fertility, moisture, and women's work.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2490,ENT_SLAV_SVAROG,patron_of,ENT_CRAFT,high,Svarog is the Slavic celestial smith and god of fire and metalworking; the Slavic translation of Malalas glosses him as the craftsman-god who taught smithing.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2491,ENT_SLAV_ROD,patron_of,ENT_FATE,medium,"Rod, the ancestral birth-deity, is paired with the Rozhanitsy (fate-spinners) who allot each newborn's destiny; condemned in Old Slavic ecclesiastical texts.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 2492,ENT_SLAV_SVAROG,aligned_with,ENT_HEPHAESTUS,high,"The Slavic translation of the chronicle of John Malalas explicitly glosses Svarog with the Greek smith-god Hephaistos (and Dažbog with Helios), an attested medieval interpretatio.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5597,ENT_SLAV_PERUN,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Perun heads the Kiev pantheon listed in the Primary Chronicle.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5598,ENT_SLAV_VELES,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Veles is a principal Slavic god named in the Primary Chronicle and treaty oaths.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5599,ENT_SLAV_SVAROG,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Svarog is a chief celestial deity of the Slavs.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5600,ENT_SLAV_DAZBOG,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Dažbog is named in the Kiev pantheon of the Primary Chronicle.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5601,ENT_SLAV_MOKOSH,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Mokosh is the sole goddess in the Kiev pantheon of the Primary Chronicle.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5602,ENT_SLAV_ROD,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,medium,Rod is a Slavic ancestral/birth deity attested in the homiletic tradition.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5603,ENT_SLAV_SIMARGL,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Simargl is named in the Kiev pantheon of the Primary Chronicle.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5604,ENT_SLAV_STRIBOG,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Stribog is named in the Kiev pantheon of the Primary Chronicle.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5605,ENT_SLAV_KHORS,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,high,Khors is named in the Kiev pantheon of the Primary Chronicle.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5615,ENT_SLAV_BELOBOG,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,low,Belobog is the reconstructed counterpart to Chernobog; not independently attested.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5617,ENT_SLAV_ROZHANITSY,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,medium,The Rozhanitsy are fate goddesses invoked with Rod in the homiletic tradition.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5618,ENT_SLAV_MARZANNA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,medium,Marzanna/Morana is a widely attested death-and-winter figure of Slavic seasonal cult.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5619,ENT_SLAV_JARILO,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,medium,Jarilo is a seasonal fertility figure of the Slavic folk cult.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5620,ENT_SLAV_DEVANA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,low,Devana is a disputed hunt goddess of the late Polish chronicle tradition.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5621,ENT_SLAV_LADA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,low,Lada is a disputed/putative goddess; her status as a genuine deity is contested.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5622,ENT_SLAV_DOLA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,low,"Dola, the personification of personal fate, is grouped with the Slavic fate powers.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5623,ENT_SLAV_KUPALA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_PANTHEON,low,"Kupala is the personification of the midsummer rite, grouped with the seasonal cult.",SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5624,ENT_SLAV_DOMOVOI,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Domovoi is the archetypal East-Slavic house spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5625,ENT_SLAV_RUSALKA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Rusalka is a core East-Slavic water spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5626,ENT_SLAV_LESHY,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Leshy is the East-Slavic forest spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5627,ENT_SLAV_VODYANOY,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Vodyanoy is the East-Slavic water spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5628,ENT_SLAV_KIKIMORA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Kikimora is an East-Slavic household spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5629,ENT_SLAV_BANNIK,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Bannik is the East-Slavic bathhouse spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5630,ENT_SLAV_POLEVIK,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,high,Polevik is the East-Slavic field spirit.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5631,ENT_SLAV_BABA_YAGA,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,medium,Baba Yaga is the principal witch-figure of East-Slavic folk narrative.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5632,ENT_SLAV_KOSCHEI,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,medium,Koschei is a central antagonist of East-Slavic folktale belief.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5633,ENT_SLAV_ZMEY_GORYNYCH,member_of,ENT_SLAV_FOLK_SPIRITS,medium,Zmey Gorynych is the dragon of East-Slavic folk narrative.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5636,ENT_SLAV_MARZANNA,opposes,ENT_SLAV_JARILO,medium,Marzanna (death/winter) and Jarilo (spring/fertility) form the reconstructed seasonal death-and-rebirth opposition.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5640,ENT_SLAV_ROZHANITSY,aligned_with,ENT_SLAV_ROD,high,The Rozhanitsy are consistently invoked together with Rod as the birth-fate powers.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5647,ENT_SLAV_MARZANNA,presides_over,ENT_DEATH,medium,Marzanna/Morana personifies death and winter in Slavic seasonal custom.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5648,ENT_SLAV_JARILO,presides_over,ENT_FERTILITY,medium,Jarilo is a spring/fertility figure of the seasonal folk cult.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5650,ENT_SLAV_LADA,presides_over,ENT_LOVE,low,Lada is the putative (disputed) goddess of love and marriage.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5651,ENT_SLAV_DOLA,presides_over,ENT_FORTUNE,medium,Dola is the personification of personal fortune/fate in Slavic folk belief.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5652,ENT_SLAV_ROZHANITSY,presides_over,ENT_FORTUNE,medium,The Rozhanitsy allot fate and fortune at birth.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5654,ENT_SLAV_VODYANOY,presides_over,ENT_WATER,high,Vodyanoy rules ponds and rivers in East-Slavic folk belief.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5655,ENT_SLAV_RUSALKA,presides_over,ENT_WATER,medium,The Rusalka is a water spirit of rivers and lakes.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5656,ENT_SLAV_POLEVIK,presides_over,ENT_AGRICULTURE,medium,Polevik is the spirit of cultivated fields and crops.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5657,ENT_SLAV_DOMOVOI,presides_over,ENT_PROTECTION,medium,The Domovoi is the tutelary protector of the household.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed, 5658,ENT_SLAV_ZMEY_GORYNYCH,presides_over,ENT_DESTRUCTION,low,The fire-breathing dragon embodies chaos and devastation in East-Slavic byliny.,SRC_BRUCKNER_SLAVIC_MYTH,reviewed,