Fauns and satyrs were among the most popularly depicted mythological creatures in ancient Greece and Rome. From the Renaissance and Baroque period onwards, they managed to recaptivate the minds of many European artists and they still are very popular in Western fantasy culture today. However, during one millennium of relative unpopularity, people had gradually forgotten the distinction between these two creatures and the terms were used interchangeably to describe a species of men with the horns and hind legs of a goat. Artists like Peter Paul Rubens, Filippo Lauri and later William-Adolphe Bouguereau painted woodland creatures that were likely intended to portray satyrs, but most individuals who lived in Antiquity would no doubt interpret them as depictions of the God Faunus (Pan). This confusion has continued to this day as simple image searches on Google for the terms "satyr" and "faun" will show. A notable example of this confusion in modern times can be seen in Disney’s Hercules (1997), where “Phil” describes himself as a satyr, even though he has all the physical characteristics of Faunus/Pan. Even museums that have ancient Greek and Roman artefacts are not always aware of this problem and sometimes use incorrect description cards.
In this post, I will
attempt to show the difference between a satyr and Faunus as seen in Roman art, so Greco-Roman
art enthusiasts, modern artists and cosplayers alike can henceforth be aware of
the distinction. The comparison below uses ancient Roman art as a starting
point, but I will briefly mention pre-Roman examples where relevant.
Background
Faunus was the
grandchild of Saturn and the son of Picus according to Roman tradition ❶. Sources in the Greek tradition described his
equivalent Pan as the child of Hermes among others ❷.
The depiction of Faunus in Rome was heavily influenced by that of the Greek
Pan.
The satyrs on the
other hand were the children of Silenus ❸ (although other sources
describe them as the children of Hermes ❹ or of the
Naiads ❺) and have great physical resemblance to him
in art. The appearance of Silenus can be described as an old, obese satyr (Fig1).
Fig.1: Silenus, the father of the satyrs, Apulia, 4th century BCE, Allard Pierson Museum, Amsterdam (the Netherlands) |
Ears
Both Faunus and satyrs
are usually depicted with the ears of a donkey or a horse, not unlike the “elf
ears” as depicted in the Lord of the Rings movie series or the American
Christmas elves.
Fig.2: Pan/Faunus mask, Sicily, 3rd – 2nd century BCE, Allard Pierson Museum, Amsterdam (the Netherlands) |
Fig.3: Roman jug with decoration shaped like a mask of Faunus, Valkhof, Nijmegen (the Netherlands) |
Horns
The God Faunus has
always been depicted with the horns of a goat, like his Greek equivalent Pan (Fig.2 and 3).
Satyrs never had horns
on Greek figure vases (Fig.4). In later depictions they are sometimes
shown with very small hornlike protrusions on their head (Fig.5),
but plenty of Roman artistic renderings show them without horns (Fig.6 and 8).
Modern depictions often show both of them with large ram’s horns, but this is likely a misinterpretation of depictions of Zeus Ammon / Iuppiter Ammon (Fig.7). A famous example of this confusion can be seen in Pan’s Labyrinth (2006).
Fig.4: Early Greek depiction of a satyr, Oudheidkundig museum, Leiden (the Netherlands) |
Fig.5: Roman bust of a satyr with very small horns, head: 1st century, rest: reconstructed in 18th century, Chicago National Museum of Art (USA) |
Fig.6: Roman bust of a satyr without horns, Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Trier (Germany) |
Modern depictions often show both of them with large ram’s horns, but this is likely a misinterpretation of depictions of Zeus Ammon / Iuppiter Ammon (Fig.7). A famous example of this confusion can be seen in Pan’s Labyrinth (2006).
Fig.7: Roman oil lamp with Iuppiter Ammon (ram's horns), not Faunus or a satyr, Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Trier (Germany) |
Tail
Fig.8: Side of a Gallo-Roman Bacchic funerary stele showing a satyr eating grapes and carrying a grape harvesting sickle, Musée Archéologique, Arlon (Belgium) |
Faunus / Pan had a goat tail matching the rest of his lower body.
Legs and feet
Faunus / Pan is
usually depicted with goat legs (Fig.9), but depictions of him with human legs exist.
Fig.9: Faunus on a Roman funerary relief, Römisch-Germanisches Museum Cologne (Germany |
Satyrs are never
depicted with goat legs, and this is possibly the most important distinction between
fauns and satyrs. Early Greek depictions sometimes show satyr-like creatures
with the legs of a horse,
but this may actually be Silenus. Either way, the author has never seen a satyr
with goat legs in Roman art.
The literary sources
leave somewhat more room for discussion. Both Lucretius ❼and Horace ❽ speak
of “goat-footed satyrs”. On the other hand, Propertius ❾, Nonnus❿ and Ausonius⓫ make the same claim about panes.
Fur and hair
Faunus is generally shown
as very hairy. He usually has a beard and fur all over his lower body (Fig.9).
Fig.10: Roman statue of group of satyrs, 1st century CE, Chicago National Museum of Art (USA) |
Satyrs may have been
hairier in early Greek depictions, but as Bacchus/Dionysus traded his mature,
bearded look for a more youthful appearance, so did the satyrs. Satyrs in Roman
art therefore rarely have beards, exept if a specific, named satyr in involved.
Their bodies generally appear quite smooth and youthful and they often wear animal
skins over their shoulders to keep their hairless bodies warm (Fig.10).
The only thing remaining from their original beast-like appearance is their distinct
shaggy hairstyle (Fig.5, 6, 8 and 10).
Members of the entourage
of the Wine God Bacchus
It seems likely that
the confusion between satyrs and fauns arose as a result of their association
with the Wine God Bacchus. Even though Silenus, satyrs and maenads typically
belonged to the retinue of Bacchus, other Gods also temporarily joined the Wine
God’s thiasus. Hercules is one of them ⓬ and Faunus another,
as described in several myths, which explains why both creatures can appear in
Bacchic art. What certainly made the situation more complicated is the fact
that there is mention of a third kind of creature: the fauns (fauni
or panes)⓭. Literature names
these creatures, who are more or less to Faunus what satyrs are to Silenus, but
in Bacchic art, they are rather rare. One remarkable sarcophagus that does shows several fauni in a Bacchic context, nevertheless proves that they are still
quite distinct beings in the 2nd century CE: On this sarcophagus, two
satyrs support their intoxicated Father Silenus while several others hold torches
aloft. Meanwhile, a female faun to the left of the scene tries to copulate with
a herm of Faunus (who himself is seen leaving a building in the background) and
a couple of fauns to the right is about to mate in front of a herm depicting a
young faun. Trying to explain this scene by identifying what I argue to be the
fauns (the goat-footed ones) as satyrs and vice versa would be problematic. It is far more plausible that satyrs would help their Father
rather than fauns.
How can we know who is
who in art?
Certain statue groups unmistakeably
depict myths that feature Pan/Faunus, like this statue of Faunus teaching
Daphnis how to play the syrinx.
An attempt to explain the goat-like creature in the statue group as a satyr,
would also be problematic.
If the dancers in the
thiasus of Bacchus are called maenads or nymphs when they are female and satyrs
when they are male, it should be no surprise that depictions of maenads
dancing with what I have argued to be satyrs (the ones with human legs) are far more abundant than depictions
of Faunus with a maenad. It seems that the latter pair only became popular in modern
times.
Conclusion
There are enough examples of vague or misinformed descriptions in late Roman literature to explain the confusion in modern times, but the depiction of satyrs and Faunus/fauns in ancient Greek and Roman art does not allow for any confusion. The popular myths provide enough information and description to identify them with great certainty.
There are enough examples of vague or misinformed descriptions in late Roman literature to explain the confusion in modern times, but the depiction of satyrs and Faunus/fauns in ancient Greek and Roman art does not allow for any confusion. The popular myths provide enough information and description to identify them with great certainty.
Fig.11: Roman statue of Bacchus, surrounded by two satyrs and Faunus, 2nd-3rd century CE, Chicago National Museum of Art (USA) |
❶ Vergil.
Aeneid. VII, 47-51.
❸ Euripides. Cyclops. 13, 82, 269.)
❹ Nonnus. Dionysiaca. XIV. 113.
❺ Xenophon. Symposium. v. 7.
❻ Philostratus the Elder. Imagines 1. 22. ; Pausanias, Description of Greece. 1. 23. 6. ; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 14. 105 ff.)
❼ Lucretius. De Rerum Natura. 4.572.: “capripedes Satyros”
❽ Horace. Odes. II, 19.: “capripedum Satyrorum”
❾ Propertius III. 15. 34 “capripedes agitat cum laeta protervia Panas”
❿ Nonnus. Dionysiaca. 21. 178 ff
⓫ Ausonius. Mosella. Praef 170. “capripedes agitat cum laeta protervia Panas”
⓬ Reineking, Brian (2016) The Esoteric Codex: Demigods of Classical Mythology. Lulu.com: p127.
⓭ Nonnus. Dionysiaca 14. 67 ff
❹ Nonnus. Dionysiaca. XIV. 113.
❺ Xenophon. Symposium. v. 7.
❻ Philostratus the Elder. Imagines 1. 22. ; Pausanias, Description of Greece. 1. 23. 6. ; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 14. 105 ff.)
❼ Lucretius. De Rerum Natura. 4.572.: “capripedes Satyros”
❽ Horace. Odes. II, 19.: “capripedum Satyrorum”
❾ Propertius III. 15. 34 “capripedes agitat cum laeta protervia Panas”
❿ Nonnus. Dionysiaca. 21. 178 ff
⓫ Ausonius. Mosella. Praef 170. “capripedes agitat cum laeta protervia Panas”
⓬ Reineking, Brian (2016) The Esoteric Codex: Demigods of Classical Mythology. Lulu.com: p127.
⓭ Nonnus. Dionysiaca 14. 67 ff
Thank you! This was super helpful!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much. Interesting and useful.
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