Diana was the Roman counterpart of Artemis.
Artemis is a Greek goddess; the Roman Diana was a cultural counterpart.
Artemis was the Greek goddess of the Hunt. Her Roman counterpart is Diana.
The Roman goddess Diana, counterpart to the Greek Artemis was a virgin goddess and did not have a child.
Yes, Artemis is the Greek goddess of the hunt, childbirth, maidens, and wildlife. Her Roman counterpart is Diana.
well Artemis is the greek goddess of the hunt and Diana is her roman counterpart.
Yes. Artemis was the Greek goddess and Diana was the Roman counterpart. Artemis/Diana was the goddess of the Hunt, childbirth, chastity, the moon, and wildlife.
When a mythical goddess is the goddess of the hunt, it means that they aid hunters while they hunt. Their duties may also include caring for wild beasts. The Greek goddess of the hunt is Artemis. The Roman goddess of the hunt is Diana.
In Greek mythology the goddess of archery and the hunt was Artemis. Her twin brother Apollo was also a god of archery.The Greek Archer Goddess was Artemis, and Diana is her Roman counterpart. Apollo (in Greek AND Roman legends) is Artemis's or Diana's brother, depending on if your going by Greek or Roman Mythology.
Apollo was a god, not a goddess. His Roman name was the same as his Greek one. However, he had a twin sister, Artemis, whose Roman name was Diana.
The Greek goddess of hunting is Artemis. Her Roman counterpart is Diana.
Nothing! Diana is the name "Artemis" in Latin. So actually, Diana is in Latin. Artemis is the ancient Greek goddess representing the Moon, sister of Sun, Apollo. She was a great huntress. When Romans adopted ancient Greek culture and mythology, they worshipped Artemis under the name "Diana".derived from an old Indo-European root meaning "heavenly, divine",
Diana was the Roman goddess of the hunt and the wilderness. Her Greek counterpart was Artemis.