Many religions use the technique of encapsulating another religion to convert people to follow their religion.
For instance Christians celebrate December the 25th as the birthday of Jesus Christ, when in factit'shighly unlikely to be that date. The 25th was chosen specifically tocoincidewith a pagan tribal winter festival. The entrails of animals strewn in the trees for the Gods to eat, became the tinsel you put on a Christmas tree.
So it was with the Romans. They saw the pantheon of Gods that the Greeks had and renamed them with Roman names. They even changed some of the stories associated with those Gods to make them more palatable to Roman citizens.
The Greek God Hermes was the messenger of the Gods. He was the son of Zeus and Maia. The Romans later renamed him Mercury and the planet was named after him.
Mercury was Hermes in Greek mythology. Hermes/Mercury was the messenger god.
Mercury (Hermes in Greek).
The Roman equivalent to Hermes the Greek god was Mercury.
Mercury was named after Hermes, the Roman god of travel.
Hermes.
Mercury is the Roman counterpart of the Greek god Hermes.
Because the planet Mercury moves the fastest, and Hermes moved quickly. Hermes's Roman name is Mercury.
Actually, the planet was named after the Roman version of the Greek god Hermes, which was Mercury.
The Greek God Hermes was the messenger of the Gods. He was the son of Zeus and Maia. The Romans later renamed him Mercury and the planet was named after him.
Mercury was Hermes in Greek mythology. Hermes/Mercury was the messenger god.
Mercury is not named after Apollo; it is actually named after the Roman god of mythology Mercury, who was the messenger of the gods. In Greek mythology, Mercury was known as Hermes.
The planet Mercury is named after the Roman messenger god (the counterpart of the Greek Hermes).
The ancient Greek god named Hermes, was duplicated by ancient Rome as the god Mercury. As an aside, the closest planet to the Sun bears the same name, namely Mercury.
Mercury was the winged messenger god (from the Greek god Hermes).
Mercury's Greek counterpart is named Hermes. His symbol is the caduceus, and he is god of traveler thieves and merchants
Mercury is the planet which is nearest to the Sun and, therefore, by Kepler's laws of planetary motion, it travels around the sky the quickest. The ancient Greeks named the planet after their swift-footed messenger god, Hermes. The Romans, who equated the god Hermes with their Mercurius, named the planet after him. The name was later anglicised to Mercury.