I don't think there's a god or goddess for weather in general. There are gods for various aspects of weather, but the whole of weather is a result of them all working together.
In fact, there were even different gods for different winds. For example, Zephyrus was the god of the west wind, and Boreas was the god of the north wind. (Notus and Eurus were the south and east winds respectively.) Zeus was a god of rains and storms... particularly thunderstorms... and Apollo was the god of the sun.
Mercury was Hermes in Greek mythology. Hermes/Mercury was the messenger god.
The god of fear and panic in Greek Mythology was Phobos
The Greek God of wrestling is the half-god Hercules (Roman Mythology) or Herakles (Greek Mythology). Hercules like to wrestle his guests to exhaustion and then kill them.
messenger god in Greek mythology
Greek Mythology - Hades Roman Mythology - Pluto
No. Zeus is the King of the Olympians in Greek Mythology. He is a god, but he is not the Christian God.
Ares is the God of War in Greek Mythology.
In Greek mythology, a god associated with sleep was Hypnos. In Roman mythology, this god is called Somnus. The Greek god of dreams was Morpheus.
Mercury was Hermes in Greek mythology. Hermes/Mercury was the messenger god.
No, Apollo is the god of medicine in Greek Mythology. Hermes is the god of travellers, thieves and the messenger god.
Greek mythology is about the ancient Greek gods. Rome was not an ancient Greek god.
The god of fear and panic in Greek Mythology was Phobos
Hermes was the Greek messenger god. His Roman name was Mercury.
There is no Koes in Greek mythology.
The Greek God of wrestling is the half-god Hercules (Roman Mythology) or Herakles (Greek Mythology). Hercules like to wrestle his guests to exhaustion and then kill them.
messenger god in Greek mythology
Various cultures have deities associated with weather, such as PerkΕ«nas in Baltic mythology, Zeus in Greek mythology, Tlaloc in Aztec mythology, and Susanoo in Japanese mythology. There isn't one universal goddess of weather, but many mythologies feature gods and goddesses who control or represent different aspects of weather.