entity_id,source_id,evidence_type,source_note ENT_MYC_DIWIA,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,direct attestation,Linear B di-u-ja attested at Pylos; Ventris & Chadwick (1973): di-u-ja as feminine form of di-we; goddess in the Pylos offering lists ENT_MYC_DOPOTA,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"do-po-ta (probably 'Despotes / the Lord', masculine counterpart to Potnia) receives offerings on Pylos tablets; a distinct titular deity." ENT_MYC_DRIMIOS,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"di-ri-mi-jo on Linear B tablet PY Tn 316, explicitly called di-wo i-je-we ('son of Zeus'); a distinct Mycenaean deity with no surviving Olympian identity." ENT_MYC_ENYALIOS,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,direct attestation,"Linear B e-nu-wa-ri-jo; PY Tn 316: the crucial tablet where Enyalius and A-re (Ares) appear as SEPARATE offering recipients, establishing they were distinct Mycenaean deities; Ventris & Chadwick (1973) p. 289 and notes" ENT_MYC_IPHIMEDEIA,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"i-pi-me-de-ja on PY Tn 316; though later myth knows Iphimedeia as a mortal heroine, in the Pylos tablet she is a divine cult-recipient." ENT_MYC_PANTHEON,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,scholarly attestation ENT_MYC_PIPITUNA,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"pi-pi-tu-na, a goddess receiving offerings on Knossos tablets (KN Fp series); a pre-Greek/Minoan-substrate theonym with no Olympian identity." ENT_MYC_POTNIA,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,direct attestation,"Linear B tablets: KN V 52 (Athana Potnia at Knossos); PY An 1281 (Potnia unqualified at Pylos); multiple offering tablets at Knossos, Pylos, and Mycenae; Ventris & Chadwick (1973) ch. 7 on Mycenaean religion and the Potnia problem" ENT_MYC_POTNIA_LABYRINTH,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"da-pu2-ri-to-jo po-ti-ni-ja ('Mistress of the Labyrinth') receives honey in Linear B tablet KN Gg 702 — the earliest textual attestation of the labyrinth, a distinct Cretan Potnia." ENT_MYC_QERASIJA,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"qe-ra-si-ja (masc. qe-ra-si-jo) receives offerings on Knossos tablets; read as 'the Theran goddess' or a beast-cult deity, a distinct Cretan-Mycenaean name." ENT_MYC_TN316,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,direct attestation,"PY Tn 316; Ventris & Chadwick, Documents in Mycenaean Greek" ENT_MYC_TRISHEROS,SRC_VENTRIS_CHADWICK,scholarly attestation,"ti-ri-se-ro-e (Tris-heros, 'the Thrice-Hero') receives offerings on PY Tn 316, the earliest attestation of Mycenaean hero/ancestor cult."