relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1540,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,reception_of,ENT_CAN_ASTARTE,low,South Arabian Athtar as a related form of the Semitic Venus deity complex cognate with Canaanite Astarte/Ugaritic ʿAttar; the masculine gender is the South Arabian distinguishing feature.,SRC_CROSS_CANAANITE_MYTH,reviewed,PER_SABAEAN 1543,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,received_as,ENT_ARA_AL_UZZA,low,"The South Arabian masculine Venus deity (Athtar) and the North Arabian feminine Venus deity (Al-Uzza, ""the most mighty"") are both Venus deities within the Arabian religious world. The incense trade routes connecting South Arabia to the Hijaz and the Levant provided the vector for religious exchange; the feminization of the Venus deity in the North Arabian tradition (mirroring the general Levantine pattern of a feminine Venus) likely reflects the stronger influence of Phoenician/Canaanite religion on North Arabia. Confidence low: both are Venus deities in the same broad Semitic religious tradition, but the gender difference makes a direct transmission chain less certain than a parallel development from the common Semitic ʿAttar- root.",SRC_HOYLAND_ARABIA,reviewed,PER_ARA_PRE_ISLAMIC 4368,ENT_SAB_ATHTAR,member_of,ENT_AKS_PANTHEON,high,ʿAthtar was worshipped in Dʿmt-period Ethiopia.,SRC_MUNRO_HAY_AKSUM,reviewed,