Pan

Pan was a god in Greek mythology. Like the other Greek gods, Pan was regarded as a myth by later cultures, but was in fact a powerful extradimensional entity. (PROSE: The Rise & Fall of Señor 105)

Biography
When several of the gods decided to align themselves to the planets of the solar system, Pan took El Mundo, where he sired a race of Satyrmen. The Satyrmen developed a key that could open a gateway to the gods' realm; Pan shared this technology with the other gods, creating similar keys for Aphrodite (on Venus), Gaia (on Earth), Ares (on Mars), Hestia (on Planet 5), and the others.

When El Mundo was ejected from the solar system, the Satyrmen modified their bodies with technology to survive. When a technological plague began to assimilate the planet's inhabitants, Señor 106 helped Pan and some uninfected refugees to Earth; Pan died, or fell into a deep sleep. Señor 106 helped the surviving Satyrmen establish Pangrave, a hidden settlement in a cave on the coast of Spain; Pan's body was kept on a gigantic catafalque in the meeting chamber (PROSE: The Rise & Fall of Señor 105)

Legacy
A satyr that resembled Pan guarded Persephone while she was imprisoned. Satyrs reminded Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart of the drawing of Pan in The Wind in the Willows. (PROSE: Deadly Reunion)

Olive Hawthorne had a book with a picture of the horned god Pan. (PROSE: Doctor Who and the Dæmons)

The Third Doctor knew that the word "panic" came from fear of the pagan god Pan and it was usually experienced in woods and open places. (PROSE: Catastrophea) Paul Hamani knew that followers of Pan worked themselves into a frenzy. (PROSE: Seeing I)

In the City of the Saved, a Remake of the Great God Pan was dying in a custom-killing of deities. (PROSE: A Hundred Words from a Civil War)

Appearance
While dead or sleeping in Pangrave, Pan had a gigantic body, with cloven hooves, horns, a great curly beard, and an enigmatic smile. (PROSE: The Rise & Fall of Señor 105)