Cherubs are a Roman invention - usually relating to Cupid, god of love son of Venus.
The Greek love god, Eros, is most often the winged baby depicted, a son of Aphrodite. There were however a host of Erotes (Loves) that followed Aphrodite.
The Romans took their gods directly from the Greek pantheon. There was no god of dancing, but Terpsichore, one of the Greek muses, was the muse of dance.
Nike is the greek god of victory
The Greek God of agriculture is Demeter.
There is no Greek god named Mattias.
the highest greek god is Zeus
The Greek goddess Hera who was the goddess of hearth -- I think you mean Hestia.
If you mean medical care it is Apollo or alternatively his son Asclepius.
GOD!
The Romans took their gods directly from the Greek pantheon. There was no god of dancing, but Terpsichore, one of the Greek muses, was the muse of dance.
Cherubs are often depicted as angelic beings, symbolizing love, purity, and innocence. In religious contexts, they are sometimes believed to serve as messengers of God or guardians of sacred places. Cherubs can also be seen in art and literature as symbols of romance and beauty.
The Romans took the Greek legends and gods and renamed them. Zeus' Roman or Latin name is Jupiter. Same god, different name.
The cherubs are so popular today because they represent the hidden secrets of the Church; at the time the painter, Raphael, was inspired by God to reveal the crimes of the Church to the world, but could only do so by painting the cherubs in the Sistine Madonna.
I think it was uranus. If not it is Zeus
The name "Mars" came from the Romain when they took a part of the Greek religon. Mars is the God of War to the Romains.
None is. Just hair care products.
In the Greek mythology, Dyonisus, the God of wine and grape harvest, although not extrictly the God of theater, it was during the festivities dedicated to him that the dramatic representations took place, during the festivals called 'City Dionysia'.
Mars is the Roman version of the Greek god Ares. The name Mars is a Latinized version of the ancient Etruscan god Maris, god of fertility, vegetation, and farms. As Rome began to expand, Mars took on the qualities of the Greek god Ares.