As far as Human character twins, I can only remember Fox Features' O'Brine Twins (Waterman and Wetmore), who were silly and a bit mentally slow sailor, during the early and mid 1940s, and The Applejack Twins (Slappy and Happy), who were mischievious Appalachian country hicks, who seem to have been patterned partly after the pair of twin hicks, Lem and Luke Scragg, in Al Capp's "Li'l Abner" strip (at least being not very intelligent, hicky and gap-toothed - but not as huge or ugly as The Scraggs).
For my area of expertise, I can list many, many funny animal character sets of twins (and a few sets of triplets), including Disney's Donald Duck' nephews, Huey Dewey, and Louie Duck, and Daisy's nieces, April, May, and June, as well as Carl Barks' Beagle Boys (quintuplets, sextuplets, septuplets, or even, possibly octuplets)(it is debatable, and has been, more or less, unlimited in depictions in story panels. There were many, many more sets of twins and triplets in The Disney universe (including Lady and The Tramp's Scamp and his 3 sisters).
Speaking of Disney Comics, I, myself, invented Lucky Gladstone Gander's long-lost identical twin brother, Sadstone", who inherited all the "bad luck genes" in their shared egg, when Gladstone inherited all the "good luck genes". And so, Sadstone ran away from home many years before they became adults, to become a hermit, dwelling in a cave well-hidden in remote mountains, to avoid having his bad luck's disasters do any more harm to his family members, and to the other fellow Duckburgians. Unfortunately, though my editors loved the story's premise, and the possibilities for Saddy's future use as a recurring character, they couldn't accept his being such an extremely close relationship, "because the readers would question why he was never seen before this story (despite my logical explanation (which WAS used in the published story). They accepted the story, and paid me, but only upon my agreement to allow them to change Sadstone's relationship to Gladstone as an "identical first cousin" (as Patty and Kathy in 'The Patty Duke Show'). So, we have an "almost" pair of comic book twins here.
All the other US major Animation studios: Warner Brothers (The early 1940s monkeys - Flip and Dip (fraternal twins), Beep Beep the Road Runner's 3 sons, MGM's Barney Bear's two nephews, Fuzzy and Wuzzy, and Walter Lantz's Woody Woodpecker's two early 1940s nephews (Splinter and Knothead), who in the late 1940s morphed into fraternal twins, and Oswald Rabbit's twin nephews(Floyd and Lloyd).
Felix The Cat had a pair of twin nephews(Inky and Dinky) in his Harvey comic book stories. While with Toby Publishing, he had only one nephew, Inky. Also, Harvey's Rags Rabbit, had two twin nephews(Pesty and Jesty) during the entire 1950s.
Avon's Harrison Cady's(and later, Vince Fago's) newspaper comic strip reprints of Peter Rabbit(#1-7) featured Peter having a pair of young twin sons (Buddy and Petey, Jr.; and Uncle Wiggily also had a pair of twin nephews in their comic strips, and Dell comic books, as I recall.
And, Rudi Dirk's Katzenjammer Kids (Hans und Fritz) were twins, as well.
MLJ's Top-Notch Laugh Comics had The Three Monkey-Teers, who were triplets, during the early to mid 1940s.
ACG's "Ha Ha Comics" had Izzy and Dizzy, who were Papa Bear's twin sons, who used Aladdin's magic lamp to grant their every wish.
The simpleton almost adult twins, Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee, had their own, regular feature in a few different regular "Alice in Wonderland" series (Ziff Davis)(Disney), plus as sometime guests in a few fairy tale
series.
I'll add more as I remember them.