relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 227,ENT_EGY_AMUN,spouse_of,ENT_EGY_AMUNET,medium,Amun and Amunet form an Ogdoad pair in Hermopolitan theology.,SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed, 234,ENT_EGY_AMUN,member_of,ENT_EGY_OGDOAD,medium,Amun appears in an Ogdoad pair with Amunet.,SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed, 1464,ENT_EGY_AMUN,received_as,ENT_SYN_ZEUS_AMMON,high,"Zeus-Ammon (Ζεὺς Ἄμμων) is one of the earliest and most documented cases of interpretatio graeca: Herodotus (2.42, c. 450 BCE) explicitly identifies Zeus with the Libyan-Egyptian Amun, noting that the Egyptians ""call Zeus Amun."" The Oracle of Ammon at Siwa was visited by Croesus, consulted by Cimon, and most famously by Alexander the Great in 331 BCE (who used the identification politically to claim divine parentage). Pindar composed a hymn to Ammon (fr. 36). Plutarch (De Is. ch. 9) also discusses the identification. The syncretic figure Zeus-Ammon was then depicted as Zeus with ram's horns (Amun's attribute).",SRC_PLUTARCH_ISIS_OSIRIS,reviewed,PER_GRK_CLASSICAL 1568,ENT_EGY_AMUN,spouse_of,ENT_EGY_MUT,high,"Amun and Mut form the divine couple of the Theban Triad (Amun–Mut–Khonsu), with Khonsu as their son. Mut's Precinct at Karnak (south of the main Amun temple complex) was her primary cult center. The pairing is the dominant theological arrangement of the New Kingdom Egyptian state religion. Wilkinson (2003) p. 151.",SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed,PER_EGY_NEW_KINGDOM 1570,ENT_EGY_AMUN,parent_of,ENT_EGY_KHONSU,high,"Khonsu is the divine son of Amun and Mut in the Theban Triad; his name means ""the traveller"" and he is primarily a moon deity; his main temple at Karnak (the Khonsu temple, largely built by Ramesses III) forms the third element of the Theban triad complex.",SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed,PER_EGY_NEW_KINGDOM