Lupercus
an ancient Italian divinity, who was worshipped by shepherds as the protector of their flocks against wolves, and at the same time as the promoter of the fertility among sheep, whence he was called Inuus or
Ἐφιάλτης. On the north side of the Palatine hill there had been in ancient times a cave, the sanctuary of Lupercus, surrounded by a grove, containing an altar of the god and his figure clad in a goat-skin, just as his priests the Luperci (
Dionys. A. R. 1.79;
Just. 43.1,
4;
Liv. 1.5;
Serv. ad Aen. 6.776; Isidor. 8.11, 103, &c.; Artemid.
Oneir. 2.42). The Romans sometimes identified Lupercus with the Arcadian Pan. Respecting the festival celebrated in honour of Lupercus and his priests, the Luperci, see
Dict. of Ant. s. v. Lupercalia and
Luperci. [
L.S]