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Actually, it's dyauShpitA, pitar is the vocative form (sambodhanavibhakti), although it's funny that you stated that the role of thunder wielder was shifted from Dionysus to Zeus; in India, it was the exact opposite, dyauSh was the fashioner of the vajra (with the help of tvaShTA) which was then given to indra.My favorites are Dionysus and Zeus, and that's because we can really see Proto-Indo-European connections through these two deities (among others too, but especially these two).
Zeus derives ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European word for the sky god, Dyew Pater. Zeus is also cognate to various other deities including Tyr, Jupiter and Dyaus Pitar.
Dionysus is theorized to have common origins with the thunder and fertility gods Indra, Tanaris and Thor. When these deities broke off in Greek culture, the role of lightning wielder was absorbed by Zeus and Dionysus was left as a fertility and nature god.
Actually, it's dyauShpitA, pitar is the vocative form (sambodhanavibhakti), although it's funny that you stated that the role of thunder wielder was shifted from Dionysus to Zeus; in India, it was the exact opposite, dyauSh was the fashioner of the vajra (with the help of tvaShTA) which was then given to indra.