relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 10,ENT_APOLLO,slays,ENT_PYTHON,high,Apollo defeats Python at Delphi.,SRC_THEOI_GODS,reviewed, 11,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_ASCLEPIUS,high,Asclepius is son of Apollo.,SRC_THEOI_GODS,reviewed, 429,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_MUSIC,high,Apollo is a major Greek god of music.,SRC_THEOI_GODS,reviewed, 1392,ENT_APOLLO,received_as,ENT_CHR_APOLLYON,high,"Revelation 9:11 names the angel of the bottomless pit ""Apollyon"" (Ἀπολλύων, ""Destroyer""), a transparent Greek wordplay on Apollo (Ἀπόλλων). The identification would have been unmistakable to Greek-speaking audiences: the great healing and oracular god becomes the angel of destruction and the abyss. Justin Martyr (1 Apol. 24) explicitly lists Apollo among the gods who are demons. The Apollo→Apollyon chain is the single most textually specific Olympian demonization in the New Testament.",SRC_JUSTIN_MARTYR_APOLOGIES,reviewed,PER_PATRISTIC 1533,ENT_APOLLO,reception_of,ENT_CAN_RESHEPH,medium,"Apollo as the Greek reception of the Levantine Resheph plague-deity complex; Cypriot bilingual inscriptions explicitly equate the two; bow-and-arrow plague, dual send/avert function, and Cypriot cult are the transmission vectors.",SRC_WEST_EAST_HELICON,reviewed,PER_GRK_ARCHAIC 1742,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_ION,high,Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.7.3: Apollo and Creusa parents of Ion.,SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1857,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_ARISTAEUS_HERO,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.4.4: Apollo and Cyrene parents of Aristaeus, hero of beekeeping, cheesemaking, and olive-growing.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1858,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_ASCLEPIUS_HERO,high,Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.10.3: Apollo and Coronis parents of Asclepius; this entity records the hero/mortal aspect of Asclepius before deification.,SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1859,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_MOPSUS,high,"Apollodorus and later tradition: Mopsus the seer was son of Apollo (and Manto of Thebes in one account), inheriting prophetic gifts from his divine father.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1860,ENT_APOLLO,paired_with,ENT_HYACINTHUS,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.10.3: Apollo loved Hyacinthus; the youth died when Zephyrus (or a discus) struck him, and the hyacinth flower sprang from his blood.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1988,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_CASSANDRA,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.12.5: Apollo gave Cassandra the gift of prophecy; when she refused him, he made it so no one would believe her.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1989,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_TIRESIAS,high,Tiresias received prophetic vision from Apollo (or Zeus) as compensation for his blindness; he is the central prophetic figure across the Theban and underworld traditions (Odyssey 11.90-151; Sophocles Oedipus Rex).,SRC_HOMER_ILIAD_ODYSSEY,approved, 1990,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_CALCHAS,high,"Homer Iliad 1.69-100: Calchas, best of seers, declares he knows ""the things that are, the things that will be, and the things that were before"" through the prophetic gifts granted by Phoibos Apollo.",SRC_HOMER_ILIAD_ODYSSEY,approved, 1991,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_AMPHIARAUS,high,Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.6.4: Amphiaraus the seer-hero received prophetic gifts; his oracle at Oropus was later associated with Apollo.,SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1992,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_MANTO,high,"Manto, daughter of Tiresias, was dedicated to Apollo and served at his oracles at Delphi and Claros; the prophetic tradition passed from Tiresias to Manto and to her son Mopsus.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1994,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_MELAMPUS,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.9.11: Melampus the first mortal prophet received the gift of prophecy; tradition associates his gift with Apollo, who taught him the art.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 1997,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_TROPHONIUS,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library: Trophonius is son of Apollo (or Erginos) in the tradition; he operated the oracle at Lebadeia in Boeotia, a distinctive descent-oracle.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 2057,ENT_APOLLO,paired_with,ENT_DAPHNE,high,Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.4.1: Apollo fell in love with Daphne; she fled and was transformed into a laurel tree; the laurel became sacred to Apollo.,SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 2063,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_ARISTAEUS,high,Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 3.4.4: Aristaeus the culture hero of beekeeping and cheesemaking is son of Apollo and Cyrene.,SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 2065,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_LINUS,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.3.2: Linos the music hero is son of Apollo (and one of the Muses, or Urania).",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 2066,ENT_APOLLO,parent_of,ENT_HYMENAIOS,medium,"In one tradition, Hymenaios (the marriage song personified) is son of Apollo; he embodies the wedding ceremony.",SRC_THEOI_DAIMONES,approved, 2251,ENT_APOLLO,opposes,ENT_MARSYAS,high,"Pseudo-Apollodorus Library 1.4.2: Marsyas, a Phrygian satyr, found Athena's discarded aulos and learned to play it; he challenged Apollo to a music contest. Apollo won, and flayed Marsyas alive, hanging his skin on a pine tree.",SRC_APOLLODORUS_LIBRARY,approved, 2256,ENT_APOLLO,patron_of,ENT_SIBYL,high,The Sibyls (notably the Cumaean Sibyl) prophesy through the gift of Apollo; Ovid Metamorphoses 14.130-155 tells how Apollo offered the Sibyl anything she wished and she chose long life. Apollo is the source and patron of sibylline prophecy.,SRC_OVID_FASTI,approved,