Pluto, also known as the Greek God Hades has a dog named Cerberus. But Cerberus is often portrayed with three heads.
Pluto is actually a Roman god, and he was the god of the underworld, two of his symbols were black horses and a black chariot.
The two faced god was Janus. However, he was not a god of war. He was the god of beginnings and transitions, gates, doors, passages, endings and time.
The name of the three headed dog from Greek mythology was Cerberus. Cerberus was employed to Hades the god of the underworld. His job was to guard the death portal into Tartarus. To make sure that none of the living could enter and that none of the dead could leave. The only two people that ever accomplished getting past the beast (according to mythology) were Heracles (Hercules is the Roman name) and Odysseus. BTW, its dog not god...
January was named after Janus, the two-headed Roman deity, guardian god of portals, patron of beginnings and endings.
The pagan Roman god Janus was one of the most ancient of all the Roman gods. He is represented in sculpture as a two headed figure that looks in opposite directions. This was because the Romans believed he had knowledge of the present and could foretell the future. Janus was the god of doorways and protector of all entrances. The name of the first month of the year, January, is traced to this god. (amazing)
The Roman god Janus,who had two faces. The month of January is named after him.
He was a Roman god of doors, of beginnings and endings. He had two faces.
The Keys to Hades, the two-headed dog Ceberus and the Helm of Darkness.
The Roman Republic was headed by two annually elected consuls.
Lord of Ghosts and Spirits, God of the Underworld, and King of the Dead. Also called Pluto, carries a two-pronged fork and has a 3-headed dog named Cerberus.
Type your answer here... Yes, he is a two headed dog that guards the passage to the underword
The Roman god Mercury acted as the messenger of gods. He was also the god of Rhetoric and Commerce. His symbol is the caduceus, a staff with two snakes entwined around it. He was the roman equivalent of Greek god Hermes.