[Opinions] Romans did name after gods/goddesses (m)
in reply to a message by Night Blossom
They just didn't usually use the actual god's name, and the practice overall was comparatively rare. Some examples:
Marcus / Marcellus / Marcia / Marcella - Derived from Mars
Marius / Marianus / Marinus / Marinus / Maria (conceivably) / Mariana - Also derived from Mars
Martinus / Martina - Again derived from Mars, who was evidently a very worthy god to name your kid after!
Deodatus / Deodata - BtN says this means "given to God", but I suspect this originally meant "given to a god"
Dionysius / Dionysia - Dionysos was the Greek God of Wine, known as Bacchus to the Romans
Herminius / Herminia - Derived from Hermes, aka Mercury to the Romans
Junia - Possibly derived from Juno, Roman Goddess of Marriage
Saturnus / Saturna / Saturninus / Saturnina - Derived from the god Saturn, obviously
Amadeus / Amadea - BtN lists "love of God" as this name's meaning, but like Deodatus it could've originally meant "love of a god". However, BtN says Amadeus was used in the Late Roman period only--while I've read Amadeus was understandably popular amongst early Christians, I don't know if non-Christian Romans also used the name
Miranda
Proud adopter of 15 punctuation marks; see my profile for their names.
Marcus / Marcellus / Marcia / Marcella - Derived from Mars
Marius / Marianus / Marinus / Marinus / Maria (conceivably) / Mariana - Also derived from Mars
Martinus / Martina - Again derived from Mars, who was evidently a very worthy god to name your kid after!
Deodatus / Deodata - BtN says this means "given to God", but I suspect this originally meant "given to a god"
Dionysius / Dionysia - Dionysos was the Greek God of Wine, known as Bacchus to the Romans
Herminius / Herminia - Derived from Hermes, aka Mercury to the Romans
Junia - Possibly derived from Juno, Roman Goddess of Marriage
Saturnus / Saturna / Saturninus / Saturnina - Derived from the god Saturn, obviously
Amadeus / Amadea - BtN lists "love of God" as this name's meaning, but like Deodatus it could've originally meant "love of a god". However, BtN says Amadeus was used in the Late Roman period only--while I've read Amadeus was understandably popular amongst early Christians, I don't know if non-Christian Romans also used the name
Miranda
Proud adopter of 15 punctuation marks; see my profile for their names.