Satyr
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English: Satyrs (from Greek Σάτυρος / satyros, Latin satyrus) in Greek mythology are half-man half-beast nature spirits that haunted the woods and mountains, companions of Pan and Dionysos. Although they are not mentioned in Homer, in a fragment of Hesiod they are called brothers of the mountain nymphs and Kuretes, and an idle and worthless race. They are strongly connected with the cult of Dionysos. Satyrs are male followers; the female followers of Dionysus are Maenads
Français : Le satyre est une créature de la mythologie grecque représentant la force vitale de la nature. Il est le compagnon de Dionysos, dont il porte souvent les attributs, ou encore de Pan.
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Satyr by Praxiteles
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Satyr beim Bauern, Johann Liss, circa 1618-19, (Satyr with farmer)
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Satyr beim Bauern, Jacob Jordaens, nach 1620 (Satyr with farmer, after 1620)
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Satyr beim Bauern, Jacob Jordaens, 1620, (Satyr with farmer)
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Nymphs and Satyr (1873), William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825-1905)
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Satyr, France, 17th century
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“Faunus of Vienne”
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Satyr playing the flute
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Barberini Satyr, Glyptothek Munich 220 b.C.
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Copy of Barberini Satyr, Louvre
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Fangspiel (Faun und Nymphe)
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Faun und Nixe
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Ithyphallic satyr and protesting nymph. 500-463 BC
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Venus Inebriated by a Satyr, by Annibale Carracci
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Satyr on a Roman mosaic in Villa del Casale
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"Le Satyre", Jules Fontanez