There are little differences between the Greek and Roman Deities. The Roman equivalent of Zeus is Jupiter. The Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Greece often had symbols or attributes associated with them. These symbols served many different functions in mythology and art. On the most basic level they helped to represent a specific God or Goddess. A few of Zeus’s symbols were the oak and the lightning bolt. The lightning bolt was Zeus’s weapon, it could range from being a very simple bolt, …show more content…
She was intimately associated with the seasons. Her main symbol was wheat. Hestia was Goddess of the hearth, but was later forgotten due to being replaced by Dionysus. She was the first to receive an offering at every meal. Hera was the Goddess of marriage, and later married her brother Zeus. She is very jealous and has a vengeful nature against Zeus’s other lovers and offspring of the mortals who cross her.
The Romans had a few of their own Gods and Goddesses, and two of the most well known ones are Bellona and Janus. Bellona was the Roman Goddess of war, she was closely associated with Mars, the Roman God of War. The Romans also had Minerva, Goddess of wisdom and war, derived from the Greek Goddess Athena. Bellona was also the Goddess of destruction and devastation. Janus was, quite simply, the God of beginnings and endings. He is also the God of gates, transitions, time, duality, doorways, and passages. He is usually depicted as having two faces and it is believed that the month of January was named for Janus.
In conclusion, while Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome are often confused with each other, there are many differences between the two. Ancient Greece thrived in 5th century B.C, while Rome did not thrive for hundreds of years later. It is believed that much of what the Romans believed in was adopted from the Greeks, however with minor