Temple's mainly, each god and goddess had their own temple back in the Greek times.
The Greeks adopted many gods of the Egyptian pantheon. The Greeks assimilated much of Egyptian religion into their own faith and worship life. The way the Greeks offered divine patronage was also similar--even though the Greeks may have had different names for their deities.
Because she was the supreme goddess of the Greeks. Repeat: supreme goddess. I know that Zeus is the supreme god. Other than being the top girl of the Greeks, she was also the goddess of marriage.Hera was worshiped as the personification of fidelity and motherhood. Her worship was part of the establishment of a moral base for the Greeks (i.e. - your mother is important, don't cheat on your wife).
Well, Hera was a Greek Godess. The Greeks were unique in their culture, because their Gods had faults. They were remotely human. Who hasn't ever seen a wife battle over her husband? Hera represents the average woman. Bright, talented, and beautiful, even she had her faults. That is why ancient Greeks worshipped Hera.
At its core Hinduism is a monotheistic religion. All of the different 'gods' are manifestations of Brahman.
They fought against The Greeks and they lost
Ancient Greeks needed a place to worship the gods and to do other things.
Gods
At their temples.
The Greeks believed in all of the gods and goddesses, while everyone had their own god that they worshipped the most. Farmers worshipped Demeter in hopes of a bountiful harvest. Warriors would worship Athena or Ares, so they could be great in battle.
The ancient Greeks worshiped their gods for the same reason that any spiritual-religious people engage in worship: they believed that their gods were real, that those gods desired worship and reverence, and that those gods would reward those who worshiped them. While the Greek notion of "god" and "gods" changed significantly over the centuries, the fundamental reason for worshipping them did not.
their kids when they ate they would burn a portion of their food in a fire
Most did, yes.
At temples or by prayer.
Yes,some do!
To worship their various gods.
It is in their tradition and it is something they strongly believe in.
They worshiped a whole pantheon of Gods.