The Roman did not change the names of the Greek Muses, they had their own goddesses associated with them.
The Camenae:
Carmenta
Egeria
Antevorte/Antevorta also known as Porrima
Postverta or Postvorta (also Prorsa or Prorsa Postverta)
The Nine Goddesses of Art - the Muses - were, according to ancient Greek mythology, daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne. They ruled the arts and sciences and offered inspiration in those areas. Calliope was the Muse of epic poetry, Clio was the Muse of history, Erato was the Muse of love poetry, Euterpe was the Muse of music, Melpomene was the Muse of tragedy, Polyhymnia was the Muse of sacred poetry, Terpsichore was the Muse of dance, Thalia was the Muse of comedy, and Urania was the Muse of astronomy.
SO YEA
The Muses names are the same as in Greek Mythology.
pierides ithink
Roman mythology is based on/borrowed from Greek mythology, using diffrent names.
In Greek mythology, Ceres were names for death spirits. In Roman mythology, Ceres is the Roman form of Demeter
Many Roman gods were direct copies of Greek gods simply renamed; as in Zeus becoming Jupiter, Hades becoming Pluto, etc.
The writer of Greek Mythology is Homer. Basically, the Romans took Greek Mythology and changed the names around a bit.
The goddess of love was Aphrodite in Greek mythology, and Venus in Roman.
no they dont .
Ares - greek Mars - roman Sekhmet & Neith- Egyptian Kratos - ps3
Yes but with different names (Zeus=Greek, Jupiter/Jove=Roman)
All the planets names are from Roman mythology, not Greek.
The son of Saturn in Greek mythology is Zeus. He is known as the king of the gods and the god of thunder and the sky.