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Maia- May Juno- June
They were not; they came from two different peoples, and when Romans took over Greece their gods and goddesses were adopted and adapted to the Roman people.
Janus. The month of January is named for this god.
Janus the god of doors and gateways had two faces, but he is a Roman god, not Greek.
He was the Roman god of endings and beginnings, and had two faces, one looking forward and the other back.
Diana being the Roman name, not the Greek, none the less the similarity between the two make them hard to distinguish. They were both goddesses of wilderness and wild animals, associated with the moon and with the hunt. They were also both virgin goddesses to Greek and Roman alike.
Maia- May Juno- June
Two godesses were closely related to him. Their Roman names were Stata Mater and Maia.
I have yet in my lifetime to see a blue god I second that, I have seen two gods and goddesses that are blue. It's JUST an IMPRESSION.
No: often in Myth, a goddess came first and bore a god - or the two, god and goddess, emerged at the same time.
The Roman god Janus,who had two faces. The month of January is named after him.
He was a Roman god of doors, of beginnings and endings. He had two faces.
I'm sure you could find one or two, but in general, no.
They were not; they came from two different peoples, and when Romans took over Greece their gods and goddesses were adopted and adapted to the Roman people.
The Roman god Mercury acted as the messenger of gods. He was also the god of Rhetoric and Commerce. His symbol is the caduceus, a staff with two snakes entwined around it. He was the roman equivalent of Greek god Hermes.
Janus: two-faced, he is also the god of endings.
Janus. The month of January is named for this god.