![](/rp/kFAqShRrnkQMbH6NYLBYoJ3lq9s.png)
Pan (god) - Wikipedia
In ancient Greek religion and mythology, Pan (/ p æ n /; [2] Ancient Greek: Πάν, romanized: Pán) is the god of the wild, shepherds and flocks, rustic music and impromptus, and companion of the nymphs. [3]
Pan • Facts and Information on the God Pan - Greek Gods and …
The culture of Ancient Greece involved a complex spiritual world of major and minor gods that oversaw human events and engaged in dramas of their own. One of these, called Pan, ruled over nature and pasturelands. He is frequently depicted in literature and artworks.
Pan - Greek Mythology
Part man and part goat, Pan was the god of wild groves, shepherds, and flocks. Born in Arcadia to Hermes and a Dryad, Pan was a precocious child whose goat’s feet and horned head delighted gods, but startled mortals. Nymphs weren’t too happy with his looks either and, as much as Pan loved them, they almost never loved him back.
Pan: The God of Shepherds and the Wild in Greek Mythology
Jan 24, 2025 · In Greek mythology, Pan is the penultimate god of the wilds. His domains include shepherds, flocks, fertility, and nature. As the tutelary god of Arcadia, he was the guardian of its abundance of unspoiled natural landscapes.
Pan | Nature, Music & Flute | Britannica - Encyclopedia Britannica
Pan, in Greek mythology, a fertility deity, more or less bestial in form. He was associated by the Romans with Faunus. Originally an Arcadian deity, his name is a Doric contraction of paon (“pasturer”) but was commonly supposed in antiquity to be connected with pan (“all”).
PAN - Greek God of Shepherds, Hunters & the Wilds (Roman …
Pan was the ancient Greek god of shepherds and hunters, and of the meadows and forests of the mountain wilds. His unseen presence aroused panic in those who traversed his realm. Pan idled in the rugged countryside of Arcadia, playing his panpipes and chasing Nymphs.
Pan - World History Encyclopedia
Feb 14, 2013 · Pan is a figure from Greek mythology who was originally a pastoral god from Arcadia. It was believed Pan dwelt in the mountains and forests of Greece. He was the patron of shepherds, hence one of his attributes is the lagobolon - a hare trap. Not fully human in form, Pan's legs are that of a goat and he has horns sprouting from his head.
PAN CULT - Ancient Greek Religion - THEOI GREEK MYTHOLOGY
Pan was the ancient Greek god of shepherds and the mountain wilds. He was worshipped primarily in the highlands of the Peloponnese where rustics tended herds of goats. The traditional center of his cult was Mount Maenalus in Arcadia. In classical sculpture Pan was depicted as a goat-legged and horned man with bestial facial features.
Pan – Ancient-Greece.org
Pan (or Panas) was the god of fertility, and the special patron of shepherds and huntsmen; he presided over all rural occupations, was chief of the Satyrs, and head of all rural divinities.
Pan - Gods and Goddesses
Pan was considered to be the Greek god of outdoorsmen and nature. All things that are related to the great Greek outdoors involved Pan, who was at the center of it all. When Greeks went hunting, or out into nature, they were likely calling on Pan for help. Pan’s godliness was not limited to just the outdoors.