Indian Flute Melody
Greek God of Shepherds, Hunters the Wilds Roman FaunusGreek Mythology Greek Gods Rustic Gods Pan. Translation. All pan, Rustic. Pan, Greco Roman mosaic from Daphne C2nd 3rd A. This page describe the information about Indian Musical Instruments such as Sitar, Sarod, Santoor, Sarangi, Shehnai, Violin, Nagaswaram, Flute, Veena, Ghatam, Table. D., Hatay Archaeology Museum. PAN was the 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 Arkadia Arcadia, playing his panpipes and chasing Nymphs. One of these, Pitys, fled his advances and was transformed into a mountain pine, the gods sacred tree. LNp8xY1YM/hqdefault.jpg' alt='Indian Flute Melody' title='Indian Flute Melody' />Tanjore Viswanathan b. Madras, India, August 13, 1927 d. Hartford, Connecticut, United States, September 10, 2002 was a Carnatic musician specializing in the. Important Note It is known that many Audigy users experience certain problems with playback of some SoundFonts, especially those with a complicated structure. Tarang offers for sale the whole range of Indian musical instruments up to highly professional instruments, excellent in material, processing and sound quality. A bansuri is a side blown flute found in many parts of India and Nepal, and a musical instrument that is common in the North Indian or Hindustani classical music. It. Another, Syrinx, escaped but was turned into a clump of reeds from which Pan crafted his pipes. And a third, Ekho Echo, was cursed to fade away for spurning the god, leaving behind just a voice to repeat his mountain cries. Pan was depicted as a man with the horns, legs and tail of a goat, a thick beard, snub nose and pointed ears. He often appears in scenes of the company of Dionysos. In the classical age the Greeks associated his name with the word pan meaning all. However its true origin lay in an old Arcadian word for rustic. Pan was closely identified with several other rustic deities including Aristaios Aristaeus, the shepherd god of northern Greece who shared the gods titles of Agreus Hunter and Nomios Shepherd, the pipe playing Phrygian satyr Marsyas who challenged Apollon to a musical contest, and Aigipan Aegipan, the goat fish god of the constellation Capricorn. Sometimes Pan was multiplied into a host of Panes, or a triad of gods named Agreus, Nomios, and Phorbas. FAMILY OF PANPARENTS1. HERMES DAUGHTER OF DRYOPOSHomeric Hymn 1. Pan1. 2 HERMES THYMBRISApollodorus 1. Scholiast ad Theocritus 1. HERMES PENELOPEHerodotus 2. Apollodorus E7. 3. M3u File Player. Hyginus Fabulae 2. Nonnus Dionysiaca 1. Servius ad Aeneid 2. HERMESPlato Cratylus 4. Pliny Natural History 7. HERMES SOSENonnus Dionysiaca 1. HERMES KALLISTO Scholiast ad Theocritus 1. HERMES ORNEIOS Scholiast ad Theocritus 1. OFFSPRING1. 1 THE PANES x. Dionysiaca 1. 4. 6. KROTOS by Eupheme Eratosthenes, Hyginus Fabulae 2. Hyginus Astr. 2. 2. AKIS by Symaithis Ovid Metamorphoses 1. EURYMEDON Statius Thebaid 1. KRENAIOS by Ismenis Statius Thebaid 9. IYNX by Ekho Other references7. SEILENOS by Melia Other referencesENCYCLOPEDIAPAN Pan, the great god of flocks and shepherds among the Greeks his name is probably connected with the verb pa. Lat. pasco, so that his name and character are perfectly in accordance with each other. Later speculations, according to which Pan is the same as topan, or the universe, and the god the symbol of the universe, cannot be taken into consideration here. He is described as a son of Hermes by the daughter of Dryops Hom. Hymn. vii. 3. 4, by Callisto Schol. Theocr. i. 3, by Oeneis or Thymbris Apollod. Schol. ad Theocrit. Hermes by Penelope, whom the god visited in the shape of a ram Herod. Schol. ad Theocrit. Serv. ad Aen. ii. Penelope by Odysseus, or by all her suitors in common. Serv. ad Virg. Georg. Schol. ad Lycoph. Schol. ad Theocrit. Some again call him the son of Aether and Oeneis, or a Nereid, or a son of Uranus and Ge. Schol. ad Theocrit. Schol. ad Lycoph. From his being a grandson or great grandson of Cronos, he is called Kronios. Eurip. Rhes. 3. 6. He was from his birth perfectly developed, and had the same appearance as afterwards, that is, he had his horns, beard, puck nose, tail, goats feet, and was covered with hair, so that his mother ran away with fear when she saw him but Hermes carried him into Olympus, where all pantes the gods were delighted with him, and especially Dionysus. Hom. Hymn. vii. 3. Sil. Ital. xiii. 3. Lucian, Dial. Deor. He was brought up by nymphs. Paus. viii. 3. 0. The principal seat of his worship was Arcadia and from thence his name and his worship afterwards spread over other parts of Greece and at Athens his worship was not introduced till the time of the battle of Marathon. Paus. viii. 2. 6. Virg. Eclog. x. 2. Pind. Frag. 6. 3, ed. Boeckh. Herod. ii. In Arcadia he was the god of forests, pastures, flocks, and shepherds, and dwelt in grottoes Eurip. Ion, 5. 01 Ov. Met. Aeschyl. Pers. 4. Hom. Hymn. vii. 6, 1. Paus. viii. 4. 2. As the god of flocks, both of wild and tame animals, it was his province to increase them and guard them Hom. Hymn. vii. 5 Paus. Cloud Based Legal Case Management Software there. Ov. Fast. ii. 2. 71, 2. Virg. Eclog. i. 3. Hesych. s. v. Agreus. In Arcadia hunters used to scourge the statue, if they hunted in vain Theocrit. Theocrit. i. 1. 6. As god of flocks, bees also were under his protection, as well as the coast where fishermen carried on their pursuit. Theocrit. v. 1. 5 Anthol. Palat. vi. 2. 39, x. Call Of Duty 2 - Server Cfg Creator V3.0 more. As the god of every thing connected with pastoral life, he was fond of music, and the inventor of the syrinx or shepherds flute, which he himself played in a masterly manner, and in which he instructed others also, such as Daphnis. Hom. Hymn. vii. 1. Theocrit. i. 3 Anthol. Palat. ix. 2. 37, x. Virg. Eclog. i. 3. Serv. ad Virg. Eclog. He is thus said to have loved the poet Pindar, and to have sung and danced his lyric songs, in return for which Pindar erected to him a sanctuary in front of his house. Pind. Pyth. iii. 1. Schol. Plut. Num. Pan, like other gods who dwelt in forests, was dreaded by travellers to whom he sometimes appeared, and whom he startled with a sudden awe or terror. Eurip. Rhes. 3. 6. Thus when Pheidippides, the Athenian, was sent to Sparta to solicit its aid against the Persians, Pan accosted him, and promised to terrify the barbarians, if the Athenians would worship him. Herod. vi. 1. 05 Paus. He is said to have had a terrific voice Val. Flacc. iii. 3. 1, and by it to have frightened the Titans in their fight with the gods. Eratosth. Catast. It seems that this feature, namely, his fondness of noise and riot, was the cause of his being considered as the minister and companion of Cybele and Dionysus. Val. Flacc. iii. 4. Pind. Fragm. 6. 3, ed. Boeckh Lucian, Dial. Deor. 2. 2. He was at the same time believed to be possessed of prophetic powers, and to have even instructed Apollo in this art. Apollod. i. 4. 1. While roaming in his forests he fell in love with Echo, by whom or by Peitho he became the father of Iynx. His love of Syrinx, after whom he named his flute, is well known from Ovid Met. Serv. ad Virg. Eclog. Georg. iii. 3. 91 Macrob. Sat. v. 2. 2. Fir trees were sacred to him, as the nymph Pitys, whom he loved, had been metamorphosed into that tree Propert. Theocrit. v. 5. 8 Anthol. Palat. ii. 6. 30, 6. Sacrifices were also offered to him in common with Dionysus and the nymphs. Paus. ii. 2. 4. 7 Anthol. Palat. vi. 1. 54. The various epithets which are given him by the poets refer either to his singular appearance, or are derived from the names of the places in which he was worshipped. Sanctuaries and temples of this god are frequently mentioned, especially in Arcadia, as at Heraea, on the Nomian hill near Lycosura, on mount Parthenius Paus. Megalopolis viii. Acacesium, where a perpetual fire was burning in his temple, and where at the same time there was an ancient oracle, at which the nymph Erato had been his priestess viii. Troezene ii. 3. 2. Eresinus, between Argos and Tegea ii. Sicyon ii. 1. 0. 2, at Oropus i. Athens i. 2. 8. 4 Herod. Marathon i. 3. 2. Psyttaleia i. 3. Aeschyl. Pers. 4. Corycian grotto near mount Parnassus x. Homala in Thessaly. Theocrit. vii. 1.