relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 2351,ENT_URA_TEISHEBA,reception_of,ENT_HTT_TESHUB,high,"Urartian Teisheba is the direct reception of Hurrian Teshub through the Hurro-Urartian linguistic inheritance. The names correspond by regular sound change (Hurrian Teš(u)b → Urartian Teišeba), both are storm-thunder deities in the second rank of their divine triads, both are associated with the bull, and both command military conflict alongside their supreme deity. The Hurro-Urartian language family relationship (the two languages are closely related) makes this the most linguistically secure deity-to-deity connection in the Urartian layer. Zimansky (1985) pp. 68-70.",SRC_ZIMANSKY_URARTU,reviewed,PER_URA_IRON_AGE 2352,ENT_URA_TEISHEBA,patron_of,ENT_STORM,high,"Teisheba is explicitly the storm and thunder deity of Urartu, called ""lord of the sky"" in Urartian inscriptions. The city Teishebaini (""city of Teisheba,"" modern Karmir Blur) takes its name from his storm-deity function. He is the direct successor of Hurrian Teshub in the Urartian theological system. Piotrovsky (1969) pp. 95-100.",SRC_PIOTROVSKY_URARTU,reviewed,PER_URA_IRON_AGE 2353,ENT_URA_TEISHEBA,aligned_with,ENT_HTT_TARHUNNA,high,"Teisheba and Hittite Tarhunna are parallel thunder deities of neighbouring Anatolian traditions — both derive from the same deep Anatolian storm-deity complex (Proto-Anatolian *tarḫu-, ""to conquer/prevail""). They occupy the same second-rank position in their divine triads and share the bull iconography. The alignment reflects the broad Anatolian storm-deity tradition that also includes Ugaritic Baal, Mesopotamian Adad, and later Zeus. Zimansky (1985) p. 69.",SRC_ZIMANSKY_URARTU,reviewed,PER_URA_IRON_AGE 4391,ENT_URA_TEISHEBA,member_of,ENT_URA_TRIAD,high,Teisheba is the second-ranked storm-god of the supreme triad.,SRC_PIOTROVSKY_URARTU,reviewed,