Yes. Amon/Amun/Amen are all the different spellings of the same god; Ra can also be spelt Re; but Amon-Ra/Amun-Ra together are a different god than either Amon/Amun and Ra/Re apart.
Egyptian gods and goddesses were generally dressed like human men and women of the noble classes. Since human males and females dressed differently, the clothing of the gods reflected this.
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Alexander treated them like any other Jews where there,but Antiochus made them worship Greek gods and godesses.
There are both bad gods and good gods when it comes to the Egyptian gods.
Nector is the drink of the gods and Ambrosia is the food of the gods. ;]
Egyptian gods and goddesses were generally dressed like human men and women of the noble classes. Since human males and females dressed differently, the clothing of the gods reflected this.
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They believed in the same gods that the Greeks did, but they gave them different names. Example: Poseidon to Neptune. The gods were also perceived differently then they originally were, they were more military.
The Norse gods, or Aesir, live in the realm of Asgarth (also spelled Asgard). It's one of the nine worlds of pre-Christian Germanic cosmology.
Later when the religion went to Rome they called the gods differently. For example Hades god of the under world was called Pluto ,and Poseidon was called Neptune
The Suez canal spelled backward it's Zeus, the king of the gods, last son of Kronos an Rheia en god of lightning.
you spelled it wrong but his responsibility is making armor for other gods
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Two things; it's spelled "ziggurat" and they were huge steepled towers used as temples to the gods of the Sumerians.
Ultio was a Roman goddess. Her name begins with the letter U.
It depends on how you define 'young'. Sure, all of them were young at some point in time, but for the immortal gods and goddesses, time worked differently due to the fact that they could live forever. I would say that most of the gods were not young, however, since they lived through many generations of mortals.