Basically, the Greeks went to temples such as Delphi and gave the Statue of Apollo offerings. The temples were generally made out of pillars, so that light would always shine on the statue.
If you mean worship, yes, ancient people worshiped Apollo.
Ancient Greeks and Romans.
cause they needed help
Apollo is the greek god of the sun. He drove a sun chariot above the earths atmosphere that the greeks associate with the sun, so it would be appropiate to name it Apollo as the spaceship went outside the atmosphere to the moon, as the greeks believed apollo did with the sun
Apollo is not associated with any deity in Norse myth. Vikings never encountered the Greeks.
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Well.. if you mean like as in worship and sacrifice all there best animals than yes, they did like him.EPIC
Apollo. In the religion of the early Romans there's no trace of the worship of Apollo. The Romans were introduced to his divinity by the Greeks, and adopted all of their ideas about him from them as well. There's no doubt that the Romans knew of his worship amongst the Greeks from a very early time, and tradition says that they consulted Apollo's oracle at Delphi even before the expulsion of the kings, but the first temple that was raised to him by the Romans is in 430 BC. That temple was raised to him for the purpose of averting a plague.
Greeks
Ancient Greeks.
Apollo.
Either you mean if Apollo had a religion - which he did not, as a god himself worship another god. Or what the religion that worshiped Apollo was called, the worship of many gods (such as the Greek ones, of which Apollo is one) is called "pagan", the cult worship of Apollo was widespread.
Gods
At their temples.
If you mean worship, yes, ancient people worshiped Apollo.
He brought out the sun every day. He pulled it out. That is what the Greeks believe in.
The Greeks associated the lyre with Apollo. Hermes actually created it, but after he stole Apollo's cattle and was arguing with him, Hermes started to play the lyre. Apollo was so entranced that he traded the cattle for the lyre.