No they did not. The earliest chariots were made by the Sumerians. The first fully developed chariots were made by the Sintashta-Petrovka Proto-Indo-Iranian culture.
No. They had been around for a couple of thousand years in the Middle East before Rome became more than a village.Although the Latins are recorded early on as using chariots (see Aeneid), the Romans adopted mainly infantry tactics, and quickly learned to neutralise chariots, so they quickly disappeared from the Italian battlefield. The Hellenistic kingdoms in the east persiated with chariots for an extra century or so but learnt that they were a liability against the Roman countermeasures.
The Greeks did not invent pizza.
They made steel tools and chariots.
I believe they used Chariots
The Romans did not find chariots. They were one of the ancient civilisation which made chariots.
Ancient Roman chariots.
The wheel
For travelling or racing.
The romans
Roman chariots had a duel purpose. Chariot racing was a big sport in ancient Rome, thus chariots were made for the purpose of racing. The military had use for chariots to travel to various destinations in the empire.
No, the Greeks did. Many other integral parts of Roman art were also pioneered by the Greeks (whom they conquered), including thhe column and the basis for their sculptures.
wheels