relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1297,ENT_CAN_LOTAN,embodies,ENT_CHAOS,high,Lotan is a chaos-serpent figure embodying primordial chaos in the Ugaritic combat myth.,SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed, 1366,ENT_MES_TIAMAT,aligned_with,ENT_CAN_LOTAN,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_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_CAN_BRONZE_AGE 1367,ENT_CAN_LOTAN,aligned_with,ENT_MES_TIAMAT,medium,"Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).",SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_CAN_BRONZE_AGE 1370,ENT_CAN_LOTAN,received_as,ENT_ISR_LEVIATHAN,high,"Lotan (ltn, Ugaritic) is the direct linguistic and mythological cognate of Hebrew Leviathan (lwtn/lwytn). KTU 1.5 I 1–3: ""When you smote Lotan the primordial serpent, annihilated the twisting serpent, the mighty one with seven heads."" Isaiah 27:1 applies the same epithets to Leviathan verbatim (""Leviathan the fleeing serpent ... Leviathan the twisting serpent ... the dragon that is in the sea""). Name cognacy, description, and combat-myth role are all identical. Day 1985 pp. 1–30 and DDD_BIBLE s.v. ""Leviathan"" identify this as the most secure Canaanite→Israelite mythological transmission.",SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_ISR_EXILIC 1371,ENT_ISR_LEVIATHAN,reception_of,ENT_CAN_LOTAN,high,"Leviathan as Israelite reception of Ugaritic Lotan; name, description (seven-headed twisting serpent), and combat-myth role are directly cognate.",SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_ISR_EXILIC 1374,ENT_CAN_YAM,received_as,ENT_ISR_LEVIATHAN,medium,"Yam (Ugaritic Sea/Judge-River) as storm god's chaos adversary parallels Yahweh's combat with sea and sea-monsters in Psalm 74:13–14 (""You divided the sea ... you broke the heads of the sea monsters""), Isaiah 51:9–10, Job 38. Hebrew poetry conflates chaos sea and chaos monster (Leviathan/Rahab), absorbing Yam's role as cosmic antagonist of the storm deity. Distinct from the Lotan→Leviathan chain: this transmits the storm-god/sea combat function, not the serpent's name. Day 1985 pp. 31–87 treats the Yam tradition in Israelite texts.",SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_ISR_EXILIC 1375,ENT_ISR_LEVIATHAN,reception_of,ENT_CAN_YAM,medium,Leviathan absorbs Yam's function as chaos-sea adversary of the storm deity in Hebrew combat mythology; distinct reception path from the Lotan name cognacy.,SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_ISR_EXILIC 1380,ENT_MES_TIAMAT,aligned_with,ENT_ISR_LEVIATHAN,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_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_ISR_EXILIC 1381,ENT_ISR_LEVIATHAN,aligned_with,ENT_MES_TIAMAT,medium,"Functional/typological cognate, not an attested reception (the cosmic-sovereignty/chaos parallels route through Hurrian-Hittite intermediaries or are modern comparisons; Burkert, West).",SRC_DAY_GODS_CONFLICT,reviewed,PER_ISR_EXILIC