No one civilization did. They all made myths here and there and they were passed on and on and on and on and on and written and read and read and studied and studied and on and on...
The first written record of Greece is the Iliad. It begins with Homer and it is believed to be not earlier than a thousand years before Christ.
They saw something that didn't make sense, or that they didn't understand, so they made a god or myth that explains it.
Stories passed down orally for thousands of years that were simple human explanations to why the world is the way it is.
Yes, they're called HISTORIANS.
The Celts and the Greeks are both derived from the Indo-European peoples. I'm sure some of the basic stories that are related in each mythology come from their relative past, but the developed, Greek Mythology came first.
Norse mythology does not equate to Greek mythology in the same way that Roman mythology does. While Roman mythology borrowed extensively from its Greek counterpart, Norse mythology developed separately. The god in Greek mythology who possibly bears the strongest resemblance to Cupid is Baldur, the god of joy and light, sometimes described as a god of love. Love, however, was the goddess Freyja's domain.
Capitalize only the G i n Greek but not the mythology. It should be Greek mythology.
There is no Eric in Greek mythology.
Boltar is not from Greek mythology.
Greek mythology is about the ancient Greek gods. Rome was not an ancient Greek god.
Isis is not in greek mythology just mythology she is a egyption goddess
In Greek mythology it is Poseidon and in roman mythology it is Neptune
Mythology is about Greek mythology.
Greek Mythology is older.
there is no such thing in greek mythology.
There was no lesson; what we call Greek mythology was the Ancient Greek's religion.