relationship_id,subject_entity_id,relationship_type,object_entity_id,confidence,rationale,source_id,review_status,period_id 1347,ENT_PAN,received_as,ENT_REC_PAN_ROMANTIC,high,"Greek Pan received in 19th-century British Romanticism as the immanent spirit of wild nature and pre-Christian freedom. Hutton (Triumph of the Moon, 1999) documents this specifically: Shelley, Keats, Byron, Swinburne, Carpenter, Grahame. The Greek pastoral deity is transformed into a universal nature-spirit and symbol of pagan counter-culture.",SRC_HUTTON_TRIUMPH,reviewed,PER_19C_OCCULT 1396,ENT_PAN,received_as,ENT_CHR_DEVIL,medium,"Pan's iconographic form — goat horns, cloven hooves, hairy goat haunches, lustful nature — is the primary visual source for the Christian Devil's physical appearance. Justin Martyr (1 Apol. 25) classifies satyrs and Pan-like beings among demonic figures. The ""Pan is dead"" story in Plutarch (On the Obsolescence of Oracles 17) was Christianized as the announcement of Satan's overthrow at the crucifixion. The iconographic Devil is a composite primarily derived from Pan, a reception that registers across patristic writing, medieval art, and demonology.",SRC_JUSTIN_MARTYR_APOLOGIES,reviewed,PER_PATRISTIC 1579,ENT_PAN,reception_of,ENT_EGY_MIN,high,Pan as the Greek reception of the Egyptian Min; Herodotus 2.46 explicit; ithyphallic fertility deity equation; Min's city Akhmim became Panopolis in the Greco-Roman period.,SRC_HERODOTUS_HISTORIES,reviewed,PER_EGY_LATE_PERIOD 4183,ENT_PAN,member_of,ENT_PGM_INVOKED_POWERS,medium,Pan-the-All is invoked in PGM cosmic hymns through the wordplay Pan = 'the All'.,SRC_GREEK_MAGICAL_PAPYRI,reviewed,