relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 2321,ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Herodotus 4.94: the Getae shoot arrows at the sky to threaten Gebeleizis during thunderstorms, identifying him as the sky/storm deity. The act of threatening the deity with arrows during storms is the clearest possible attestation of his function as lord of storm and thunder.",SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES,reviewed,PER_THRA_IRON_AGE 2322,ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS,aligned_with,ENT_ZEUS,medium,"Gebeleizis is a sky-thunder deity of the Getae, functionally parallel to Zeus as the Greek sky-father and thunderer. The interpretatio Graeca structure (Herodotus reporting Thracian gods via Greek divine categories) supports this alignment. Confidence medium: structural parallel is clear; no surviving ancient explicit equation.",SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES,reviewed,PER_THRA_IRON_AGE 2323,ENT_THRA_GEBELEIZIS,aligned_with,ENT_THRA_ZALMOXIS,low,"In Herodotus 4.94-96 the transition from the Gebeleizis passage to the Zalmoxis account is abrupt, leading some scholars (Coman 1938; Eliade 1970) to interpret the two names as aspects of the same Getae deity — sky/storm aspect (Gebeleizis) vs. mystery/afterlife aspect (Zalmoxis). Archibald (1998) p. 300 treats them as potentially distinct. Low confidence given the single attestation of Gebeleizis and unclear ancient relationship.",SRC_ARCHIBALD_ODRYSIAN,reviewed,PER_THRA_IRON_AGE