[1][2] His name is 10th on the list of 16 gods on the outer rim of the Piacenza Liver (a bronze model of a sheep’s liver used as a reference or teaching tool for divination).
[2] Votive inscriptions from the liver show that he was a popular god in Etruria.
[1] Only one certain representation of Selvans has been found, alongside a statue of Culśanś.
He is portrayed as a naked youth wearing a cap made of a bear’s hide and high boots.
[1] This contrasts from the Roman Silvanus, who is usually shown as a bearded man.