{"database": "deitydb", "table": "entities", "rows": [["ENT_REC_PAN_ROMANTIC", "Pan (Romantic-Victorian Reception)", null, "Modern reception", "Deity", "Deity", "nature; wild; paganism; counter-culture; freedom; modern reception", "pan; romantic; victorian; modern reception; paganism; 19th-century; nature deity; horned god precursor", null, null, "B", "reviewed", "Hutton, The Triumph of the Moon (1999); Hanegraaff (ed.), Dictionary of Gnosis and Western Esotericism (2006)", null, null, null, "The Greek god Pan received in 19th-century British Romantic and Victorian literature as the immanent spirit of wild nature and pre-Christian freedom. Hutton (The Triumph of the Moon, 1999, chs. 3-4) documents this as a traceable historical phenomenon: Shelley consecrated a mountain altar to Pan (1821), Byron, Keats, Swinburne, Edward Carpenter, and Kenneth Grahame all deployed Pan as the symbol of paganism's cultural return. This Victorian Pan \u2014 a cosmic nature-spirit rather than the specific Greek pastoral deity \u2014 became the primary mythological template for the Horned God in Gerald Gardner's Wicca (1950s). Not a survival of ancient cult; documented modern literary-religious reception.", "deity"]], "columns": ["entity_id", "canonical_name", "greek_name", "tradition", "entity_type", "category", "primary_domains", "tags", "cult_scope", "primary_period", "evidence_confidence", "review_status", "inclusion_basis", "earth_association_score", "chthonic_flag", "serpent_flag", "short_note", "entity_class"], "primary_keys": ["entity_id"], "primary_key_values": ["ENT_REC_PAN_ROMANTIC"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 80.74450800268096, "source": "jebboone/deitydb", "source_url": "https://github.com/jebboone/deitydb", "license": "MIT", "license_url": "https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT"}