entity_id,source_id,evidence_type,source_note ENT_ARA_ALLAT,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,Healey (2001) documents Al-Lat's Nabataean inscriptional evidence and Greek identifications ENT_ARA_AL_UZZA,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,Healey (2001) on Al-Uzza's Nabataean cult and Venus/Aphrodite identification ENT_ARA_DUSHARA,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,direct attestation,Healey (2001) — Dushara is the central subject of the monograph; extensive inscriptional evidence ENT_ARA_MANAT,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,Healey (2001) on Manat's sanctuary at al-Mushallal and fate/death goddess function ENT_NAB_AL_KUTBA,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,"Scribal and commerce deity (Nabataean counterpart of Babylonian Nabu / Greek Hermes), attested at Petra, Hegra and Sinai; sometimes the goddess al-Kutbay." ENT_NAB_AL_UZZA_PETRA,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,"Petraean cult-form of al-ʿUzza, chief Nabataean goddess identified with Aphrodite, associated with Petra's Temple of the Winged Lions." ENT_NAB_ARA,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,"Tutelary god of Bostra closely associated with Dushara, who is titled 'the god of our lord who is in Bostra' in Nabataean Hawran inscriptions." ENT_NAB_MANOTU,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,"Hegran cult-form of the fate-goddess Manat, invoked as 'Manotu and her Qaisha' in the tomb-curse inscriptions of Hegra to protect burials." ENT_NAB_PANTHEON,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,"Collective grouping the deities worshipped across the Nabataean kingdom from Petra and Bostra to Hegra (Madaʾin Salih), attested in Nabataean Aramaic inscriptions and rock-cut sanctuaries." ENT_NAB_SHAI_AL_QAUM,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,"Caravan-protector and warrior god 'who drinks no wine and builds no tomb,' named in a bilingual Nabataean altar from Palmyra (CIS II 3978)." ENT_SAB_ALMAQAH,SRC_HEALEY_NABATAEAN_RELIGION,scholarly attestation,Healey (2001) provides comparative context for South Arabian and North Arabian lunar deity traditions