Relationships
Data license: MIT · Data source: jebboone/deitydb
- subject_entity_id
- {'description': 'The entity initiating or holding the relationship'}
- relationship_type
- {'description': 'Typed relationship from the controlled vocabulary (see relationship_types table)'}
- object_entity_id
- {'description': 'The entity receiving or targeted by the relationship'}
- confidence
- {'description': 'high / medium / low / speculative'}
- rationale
- {'description': 'Scholarly justification for the relationship, with source citations'}
- source_id
- {'description': 'Primary source justifying this relationship'}
- period_id
- {'description': 'Historical period in which this relationship is attested (null = all periods)'}
14 rows where source_id = "SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY"
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Suggested facets: subject_entity_id, relationship_type, object_entity_id, confidence
| relationship_id ▼ | subject_entity_id | relationship_type | object_entity_id | confidence | rationale | source_id | review_status | period_id |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2325 | Aramazd ENT_ARM_ARAMAZD | syncretized_with | Zeus ENT_ZEUS | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly equates Aramazd with Zeus: "Aramazd, who is called Zeus among the Greeks, the father of all the gods." The equation reflects both functional similarity (supreme sky-father) and Hellenistic-period interpretatio Graeca applied to the Armenian court during the Artaxiad dynasty (189 BCE – 1 CE). Agathangelos History §22. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2326 | Aramazd ENT_ARM_ARAMAZD | parent_of | Anahit ENT_ARM_ANAHIT | high | Agathangelos §22 and Khorenatsi II.12 both identify Anahit as the daughter of Aramazd. This is one of the defining structural features of the Armenian divine family. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2328 | Aramazd ENT_ARM_ARAMAZD | parent_of | Nane ENT_ARM_NANE | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly identifies Nane as "the daughter of Aramazd." The pairing of Aramazd as father with Anahit and Nane as his daughters is a defining feature of the Armenian pantheon. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2330 | Anahit ENT_ARM_ANAHIT | syncretized_with | Artemis ENT_ARTEMIS | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly equates Anahit with Artemis. Strabo (Geography XI.14.16) describes her temple at Erez and cult statue in terms consistent with an Artemis-type deity. The equation is ancient, consistent across multiple sources, and reflects functional overlap in hunting, virginity, and divine protection. The most securely attested Greek equation for any Armenian deity. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2332 | Vahagn ENT_ARM_VAHAGN | syncretized_with | Heracles ENT_HERACLES | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly equates Vahagn with Heracles at his Ashtishat temple: "Vahagn, who is called Heracles among the Greeks." The equation reflects shared dragon-slaying/monster-fighting function, exceptional strength, and the paradigmatic warrior role. Khorenatsi I.31 (the birth hymn) presents Vahagn's primal fire-birth as a hero of cosmic scope, consistent with the Heracles equation. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2334 | Astghik ENT_ARM_ASTGHIK | syncretized_with | Aphrodite ENT_APHRODITE | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly equates Astghik with Aphrodite. Khorenatsi I.15 describes her Vardavar festival — a water-pouring and dove-releasing celebration — features directly parallel to Aphrodite's cult symbols (dove, water, love). The Ashtishat place name ("city of Ashtart") reveals the deeper Semitic Astarte layer that underlies the Armenian Aphrodite equation. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2336 | Tir ENT_ARM_TIR | syncretized_with | Hermes ENT_HERMES | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly equates Tir with Hermes: "Tir, who is called Hermes by the Greeks... the scribe of Aramazd, interpreter of dreams and teacher of the arts of writing." The equation reflects shared domains: writing, commerce, messenger/scribe function, psychopomp role (recording souls' deeds), and divine interpreter. The most explicit deity-to-deity equation in Agathangelos after Aramazd=Zeus. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2337 | Tir ENT_ARM_TIR | syncretized_with | Apollo ENT_APOLLO | medium | Agathangelos §22 names Apollo alongside Hermes as a Greek equivalent of Tir: "who is called Hermes by the Greeks and Apollo by others." The Apollo equation reflects Tir's arts, divination, and prophecy domains. Confidence medium: Hermes is the primary equation; Apollo is secondary and reflects the prophetic-artistic aspect only. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 2338 | Nane ENT_ARM_NANE | syncretized_with | Athena ENT_ATHENA | high | Agathangelos §22 explicitly equates Nane with Athena: "Nane, the daughter of Aramazd, who is called Athena among the Greeks; she is the mother of virtues, the teacher of virtue, who bestows wisdom and valor." The equation is explicit, ancient, and reflects functional overlap in war, wisdom, and protection. The most unambiguous Athena equation in any Near Eastern tradition. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | Pre-Christian Armenian PER_ARM_PAGAN |
| 7072 | Gregory the Illuminator ENT_ARMC_GREGORY_ILLUMINATOR | member_of | Fathers and Saints of the Armenian Apostolic Church ENT_ARMC_FATHERS | high | Gregory the Illuminator is the founding father and first Catholicos of the Armenian Apostolic Church (Agathangelos). | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | |
| 7073 | Tiridates III of Armenia ENT_ARMC_TIRIDATES | member_of | Fathers and Saints of the Armenian Apostolic Church ENT_ARMC_FATHERS | high | King Tiridates III is venerated as a saint of the Armenian Church for establishing it as the state religion. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | |
| 7078 | Tiridates III of Armenia ENT_ARMC_TIRIDATES | taught_by | Gregory the Illuminator ENT_ARMC_GREGORY_ILLUMINATOR | high | Agathangelos records that Gregory the Illuminator converted and catechized King Tiridates III into the Christian faith. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | |
| 7081 | Gregory the Illuminator ENT_ARMC_GREGORY_ILLUMINATOR | opposes | Aramazd ENT_ARM_ARAMAZD | high | Agathangelos records Gregory the Illuminator's destruction of the cult of Aramazd and the other pre-Christian Armenian deities during the conversion. | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed | |
| 7082 | Tiridates III of Armenia ENT_ARMC_TIRIDATES | opposes | Anahit ENT_ARM_ANAHIT | medium | After his conversion, Tiridates III ordered the destruction of the temples of Anahit and the other Armenian deities (Agathangelos). | Agathangelos, History of the Armenians (Patmut'iwn Hayots'), 5th c. CE; trans. Robert W. Thomson (State University of New York Press, Albany NY, 1976) SRC_AGATHANGELOS_HISTORY | reviewed |
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CREATE TABLE "entity_relationships" (
[relationship_id] INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
[subject_entity_id] TEXT REFERENCES [entities]([entity_id]),
[relationship_type] TEXT REFERENCES [relationship_types]([relationship_type]),
[object_entity_id] TEXT REFERENCES [entities]([entity_id]),
[confidence] TEXT,
[rationale] TEXT,
[source_id] TEXT REFERENCES [sources]([source_id]),
[review_status] TEXT,
[period_id] TEXT REFERENCES [periods]([period_id])
);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_relationships_period_id]
ON [entity_relationships] ([period_id]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_relationships_source_id]
ON [entity_relationships] ([source_id]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_relationships_object_entity_id]
ON [entity_relationships] ([object_entity_id]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_relationships_relationship_type]
ON [entity_relationships] ([relationship_type]);
CREATE INDEX [idx_entity_relationships_subject_entity_id]
ON [entity_relationships] ([subject_entity_id]);