Joe Kelly
The god Pan was called, in Rome, Faunus. Also Sylvanus
In greek mythology it is called a Satyr. The Romans took the same creature and called it a Faun.This word come from Faunus, the Roman forest god comparable to the Greek god Pan, god of shepherds and flocks, of mountain wilds, hunting and rustic music; son of Hermes.His symbol is the Pan Pipes. Later the satyrs of Roman mythology adopted the chimeric characteristics.His Roman counter-part is Faunus.
Vulcan(us) is the Roman name of the Greek god Hephaestus.
Hephaestus is a Greek god. His Roman name is Vulcan.
Diana was the Roman God who was the guardian of wild beasts, horses, and domesticated animals.
The god Pan was called, in Rome, Faunus. Also Sylvanus
His Roman equivalent was Faunus.
You are referring to Faunus, whose Greek counterpart was Pan. He is the archetype from which we get Satyrs.
The symbol for the god of nature and flocks is usually depicted as a shepherd's crook or staff, known as a "crook and flail." It represents the god's role as a shepherd or protector of flocks in nature. In ancient Egyptian mythology, the god associated with these symbols is typically depicted as a human figure with the head of a ram or a ram itself.
Pan. He was also the god of nature in general. Pan was the Greek god. His Roman counterpart was Faunus.
Faunus is the Roman form of the Greek god Pan, just as Jupiter is the Roman form of Zeus, or Juno the Roman equivalent of Hera, goddess of family, the wife of Zeus/Jupiter.
The Greek god of nature, and the wild was Pan. He was a creature known as a satyr. His Roman counterpart was the god Faunus.
Faunus
I think you might be thinking of Faunus, which is the Roman counterpart to the Greek Pan, but they are only gods of the woods. There is no Greek or Roman deity associated with the concept of mischief.
Faunus; Sylvanus.
They didn't have a God of birds.
Pan (Faunus in Roman)