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The Dii Consentes (also Dii Complices) were the twelve major deities in the pantheon of Ancient Rome. They were listed by the poet Ennius about the 3rd Century, B.C.E. Their gilt statues stood in the Forum, later apparently in the Porticus Deorum Consentium. The number 12 was taken from the Etruscans, which also worshipped a main pantheon of 12 Gods. Nevertheless, the Dii Consentes were not identified with Etruscan deities but rather with the Greek Olympian Gods (though the original character of the Roman Gods was different from the Greek, having no myths traditionally associated). The most important Dii Consentes were Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva, known as the Capitoline Triad, and Mars, the tutelary (patron) god of the city of Rome.
[edit] List of the Dii Consentes
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