According to roman myth, yes.
There were three virgin goddesses in Greek Mythology. Artemis, the goddess of hunting, was one of them; she took a vow of chastity and made all of her attendants take the same vow. Athena, the goddess of wisdom was another. The last one was Hestia, the goddess of the hearth.
The goddess Artemis did not have a spouse. She was a virgin goddess.
Virgin huntress, goddess of the light of the moon, goddess of the wilderness, goddess of animals.
The Roman goddess Diana had no kids. She was a virgin goddess.
Artemis is a virgin goddess by choice. As a girl, she asked Zeus that she would always remain a virgin and never marry.But she did like someone though her hunting companion Orion. But he died.
No god married Vesta she was a virgin goddess.
The Roman goddess Vesta, virgin goddess of hearth, home, and family, the Vestal Virgins were her priestesses.
Hestia's name comes from "hearth", as she is the Greek goddess of hearth, home, and fire.
Minerva, the Roman goddess of wisdom, did not have any children. She was a virgin goddess along with Diana and Vesta.
The Roman gods liked the goddess Vesta for various reasons. She was the virgin goddess of family, home and hearth. The god was not inaugurated in the temples like other gods.
Because Vesta was the virgin goddess of the hearth (fireplace), home, and family in Roman times.
No. The other Greek virgin goddesses were Artemis (Diana in Rome) and Hestia (Vesta in Rome).
Vesta was a Roman goddess.
The Roman goddess of the hearth is Vesta. She is the virgin goddess of family and home in the Roman religion. Hestia is the nearest Greek equivalent as the goddess of hearth, home, domesticity, family, the state, and architecture.
Vesta was the virgin goddess of the hearth, home, and family in Roman religion. Vesta's presence was symbolized by the sacred fire that burned at her hearth and temples. Her closest Greek equivalent is Hestia.
No because she was a virgin. Also Diana (Artemis) and Minerval (Athena) were virgins.
Hesta's romen name is vesta.