relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 262,ENT_EGY_PTAH,paired_with,ENT_EGY_SEKER,high,Ptah and Seker are joined in Memphite funerary/craft theology.,SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed, 263,ENT_EGY_PTAH,paired_with,ENT_EGY_SESHAT,medium,"Ptah and Seshat overlap in craft, measurement, and temple foundation contexts.",SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed, 264,ENT_EGY_PTAH,identified_with,ENT_EGY_TATENEN,medium,Ptah and Tatenen overlap in Memphite creator/earth theology.,SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed, 353,ENT_EGY_PTAH,patron_of,ENT_CRAFT,high,Ptah is a creator/craft deity.,SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed, 1572,ENT_EGY_PTAH,spouse_of,ENT_EGY_SEKHMET,high,"Ptah and Sekhmet form the divine couple of the Memphis Triad (Ptah–Sekhmet–Nefertem). Sekhmet (""the Powerful One"") is Ptah's fierce consort and the lioness goddess of war and pestilence; their pairing unites the creative/craftsman principle (Ptah) with the destructive/protective force (Sekhmet). Wilkinson (2003) pp. 181, 212.",SRC_WILKINSON_EGYPTIAN_GODS,reviewed,PER_EGY_OLD_KINGDOM 1576,ENT_EGY_PTAH,received_as,ENT_HEPHAESTUS,high,"Herodotus explicitly equates Ptah with Hephaestus at 3.37, where he refers to the temple of Ptah at Memphis as the temple of Hephaestus: ""the temple of Hephaestus"" (= Ptah) at Memphis is where Cambyses committed his sacrilege. Memphis itself was sometimes called ""Hephaestia"" by Greek writers. The equation rests on shared craftsmanship and creation attributes: Ptah is the divine craftsman and creator-by-word in Egyptian theology; Hephaestus is the divine craftsman and smith of the Greek pantheon. Both are associated with fire, metalwork, and the creative power to fashion divine objects. The identification was widespread in the Ptolemaic and Roman periods.",SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES,reviewed,PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD