First off, Artemis was a Greek goddess. She has no interest in love or men. She hated males for their personality.She loved hunting with her female companions.
Click on the link below and click on the picture of Artemis when you get there. A page of information will pop up. The first two paragraphs explains Artemis' family.
because Greek's were the first to come up with 3d art on the statues they made so they gave us a huge step forward in art.
Ancient Greece, or before.
Yes, Artemis and Apollo are twins. They are the twin archers. Their mother was Leto and their father was Zeus. They were born on the island of Delos. Artemis was born first and became her mother's midwife.
Yes, Artemis was his twin sister. Legend has it that Artemis was born first and helped her mother give birth to Apollo.
First: Phoebe was a Titan, not a goddess. Phoebe, in Greek mythology, a Titan, daughter of Uranus (Sky) and Gaea (Earth). By the Titan Coeus she was the mother of Leto and grandmother of Apollo and Artemis. She was also the mother of Asteria and Hecate. ... In later mythology she was identified with the moon, as were Artemis and her Roman counterpart Diana. SHE HAS BROWN HAIR, PALE SKIN, AND SHE IS GORGEOUS!
First off, Artemis was a Greek goddess. She did not have any children because she was a virgin goddess.
Zeus's first child in Greek mythology is Athena, the goddess of wisdom and warfare.
The Temple of Artemis was supposedly the first Greek temple built of marble.
A nymph had many key roles in Greek mythology. First, they were used as hunting companions for the Greek goddess Artemis. They had to be virgins, because Artemis was the goddess of virginity. Also, nymphs were mostly from water (such as the sea or a river).
First the Greek, later the Roman culture.
Demeter made her first appearance in Greek mythology, with her earliest known mention dating back to ancient Greek literature such as Hesiod's "Theogony," written around the 8th century BCE. She is commonly associated with agriculture, fertility, and the changing of seasons.
Pandora
Daedlus
Judaism.
Greece