Varaha is the Hindu god with the form of a boar or a boar's head (and four arms holding various implements) on a man's body. Most Buddist sects do not have dieities, but that is not true of all of them. Tibetan Buddhism and Shingon Buddhism (from Japan and present on the West Coast of the US.), for example, do have dieties (I am a Shingon Buddhist). We do not have a pig diety.
The Greek god Pan. He was the god of flocks/herds/nature and was typically represented as a satyr (half man half goat).
Ganesha is the Hindu god with an elephant head. There is no Greek god that is half man-half elephant.
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.
Before Pan was a god he was a satyr which is a mythological creature that is half man and half goat. Once he became a god he kept his earthly form.
the greek god PAN. half man, half goat.
Yes, Jesus was both God and Man at the same time.
Well, First of all, there are many religeons that have multiple half god half man dieties. If its this egyptian jackal and human creature that ur talking about, that would be Anubis.
I believe Anubis.
Pan was a satyr (half man half goat)
Half man/half goat.
Jesus the Christ is the Son of God the second Person of the Holy Trinity, thus He is fully God. When He came to earth and was born of Mary in Bethlehem as a human being He became fully man. He is the God/man. fully God and fully man.
Kadaklakshmi is a tradition in Maharashtra in which a man and a women stroll around the city begging in the name of a god/goddesses (may be Kadaklakshmi who is a goddess). The women beats a kind of drum and the man, who is half naked, whips his bare back. The man whips himself in the name of god.