Roman statues showed unpleasant physical details.
A colossus is a gigantic statue. The fist people who build such statues were the Egyptians. The most famous of these are the Colossi of Memnon, two gigantic statues of Pharaoh Amenhotep III.The Greeks also built such statues; the most famous one was the Colossus of Rhodes. The Romans also built this kind of statues, such as the Colossus of Nero, the Colossus of Constantine and the Colossus of Barletta
Athena or Venus (one is Roman, one is Greek).
No, Greek technology was not similar Roman technology. Rome might have had one Greek technology that they used, but other then that one Greek technology, Roman technology was not similar to Greek technology.
he's not a greek god hes a sculptor that fell in love with one of his statues and asked aphrodite to make her real and she did
Stheno is one of the rare Greek goddesses that did not have a Roman name, only variations of her Greek.
what a weard question: no he don't because he is the light!
Carwn/Kharon is the Greek name and translation of Charon. There was no Roman counter-god; so this is one of the rare cases where the Greek name is the Roman name.
Zeus was the most important Greek god. He Roman counterpart was Jupiter/Jove.
Persephone was her Greek name. Proserpine is the Roman one.
The form of Greek art the Romans emulated the most was sculpture. This started in the first century BC when they made full bodied statues. Prior to that Roman sculpture was sculptural portraiture (busts) which they themselves had developed. The Romans made copies of full bodied statues of the important Hellenistic sculptors and based their statues on the Hellenistic style. Hellenistic art is the Greek art style from Alexander the Great's conquest of Persian Empire in the 330s and 320s BC on.
Iris is one. Apollo is often used for the Greek as well as the Roman god, although he is in fact Apollon in Greek.
Mercury was one of the Roman Gods. He was the messanger god.