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Rudra Silvanus
Faunus Tellus, Siva
Rudra Silvanus (Faunus
Tellus, Siva) was Rudra an authentically compassionate Hindu forest fertility
father god mentioned in the Vedas and many Hinduism writings.
Revered in ancient India
until around 300 BCE, he was depicted in reliefs and sculptures.
Considered by many to be an
earlier aspect of Siva, the embodied of the male aspect of creative divinity, he was portrayed with a beaded
wood necklace, a bow, a staff, a drum, a lotus, and, sometimes as a human male with a leafy head.

Hindu God Rudra and Goddess Parvati
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As Silvanus, he was a Roman woodlands Earth
Father with Otherworld shamanic powers. He was also the Roman fertility god called "Faunus Tellus"
who was the patron of herds.
He was called "Stern Kundalini Awakener
God", "Sacred Grove Wildwood King", and "Spiritual Forest Journey Initiator".
Rudra Silvanus was a
healer who responded to pleas for assistance with natural remedies inherent in
the life force of bushes, trees, stones, and wildflowers, such as the fragrance
of pine boughs, that acted as transforming and revitalizing balms...Deities Gods Goddesses
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© 2002-2008 Maureen Grace Burns, Blessings Cornucopia. All Rights Reserved.
Public Domain Image Hindu God Rudra and Goddess Parvati [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Shiv-parvati.jpg]. Accessed January 19, 2007.
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