Rhadamanthus is the Underworld god of justice.Rhamnuisa, better known as Nemesis, is the goddess of revenge.Rhea is technically not a goddess; rather, she is the wife of Cronus, and mother of the gods Zeus, Poseidon, Hades, Demeter, Hera, and Hestia.
There is none. After searching both Roman and Greek mythology, I am sad to say no Gods or Goddesses were found to start with the letter Y.
Artemis would know that there is nothing in Greek myth that a Greek god controlled that a Greek goddess did not have had a domain over as well.
She generally has just that one name, like most of the gods. In special situations an epithet can be added. Click link below, then scroll down to the section Worship of Artemis for examples!
Another name for Artemis is Diana. Diana is Roman, while Artemis is Greek. She was also referred to as Cynthia or Phoebe (but there is a Titan named that).
Gods:ErosEurusEpimetheusGoddesses:EosErisEuterpe
Ares, Athena, Artemis, Apollo, Aphrodite
Gods from Greek Mythology:AphroditeApolloArtemisAthenaDionysusHeraHermesPoseidonZeus
There were no Greek gods that had names starting with 'v'; however, there were several Roman goddesses such as 'Venus' and 'Vesta'.
The ancient Greek Gods did not have second (or family) names.
Lelantos, a titan, god of air and the skill of stalking prey, Leto's male counterpart. Leto, a titaness, goddess of motherhood, mother of Apollo and Artemis.
No, there are no Greek gods or goddesses whose names start with the letter "F." The Greek pantheon includes deities such as Zeus, Hera, Athena, and Apollo, but none of them have names beginning with the letter "F." The closest might be the Furies, who were female chthonic deities of vengeance in Greek mythology, but they were not considered gods or goddesses in the traditional sense.
The Greek gods have 2 names because they are known in both Greek AND Roman mythology, only in differant names.
There is no Greek goddess whose name starts with the letter "W" in traditional Greek mythology.
Greek or Romans ?
Yes all names have capitals
The Romans based their gods on the Greek gods and only changed the names.