They did not. Neptune was a Roman god. But the Greeks built temples to their sea god, Poseidon.
Cupid was Eros to the Greeks, he was the god of sexual love.
Zeus and Jupiter are the same God, but with a different name. The Greeks preferred to call him Zeus, whereas the Romans preferred to call him Jupiter.
Athena
It's jesus
As a polytheist, she believed in more than one god.
The greeks believed in gods. Romans belived jesus was the son of one true god.
The Greeks. They worshipped the same gods but under different names. the roman god were more warlike and about respect.
the Romans had the same gods as the Greeks, just different names
The people in Ancient Greece were polytheistic, meaning the Greeks believed in more than one god.
Greek orthodox Christians believe in one true god. The ancient Greeks had many different gods which is now classified as Greek mythology.
Mars is the Roman God of War and Ares is the Greek God of War and Bloodshed. Though they differ in name, they are just the same God of war and only differs to what the Romans and Greeks believe in.
Apollo is called by both the Greeks and Romans by the same name.
Polytheism Polytheism is a form of acknowledging the existence of more than one god. Egyptian beliefs, Hinduism, Shinto, Chinese, Greeks, Neopagan, and Anglo-Saxon religion are forms of polytheism systems believed by these 7 religions and far more.
The Greek name for the planet Mercury is "Ερμής" (Ermis), named after the messenger god in Greek mythology.
I'm not sure what the Koran has to say on the matter or what the Greeks or Romans believed. According to Jesus Christ, loving God and putting Him first is more important than anything. So the answer to your question is "yes". That doesn't mean you have to choose one or the other. You can do both at the same time. But ABOVE ALL ELSE, love and be thankful to the One who gave you that family and everything you have.
Yes they coped the Greeks they only changed the gods names. While the actual god was copied (mars is the Roman version of Aries, god of war), Romans did not use the same name.