Tag Archive: Heracles


Gilded bronze Roman "Hercules of the Theatre of Pompey", found near the Theatre of Pompey in 1864, (Vatican Museums, Rome)

Gilded bronze Roman "Hercules of the Theatre of Pompey", found near the Theatre of Pompey in 1864, (Vatican Museums, Rome)

Hercules is the Roman name for the Greek hero Herakles or Heracles; the Romans adopted the Greek stories about Heracles essentially unchanged, adding only a bit of anecdotal detail of their own. 

Hercules is a god with a difference. He started out a mortal, and then joined the ranks of the gods in Olympus. What sets him apart would have to be his immense strength, courage, intelligence, and integrity. He is more hero than god and is even today one of the most popular and remembered of all mythical gods. He is in fact, the only god chosen by Disney to be immortalised as an animated feature, even though it was distorted beyond all recognition. That should count for something.

He was born Heracles to the mortal woman Alcmene and you guessed right, Zeus when on one of his dishonourable escapades. This time he took the form of her husband Amphitryon, who was away at war and fathered Hercules. Apparently Amphitryon returned later that day, and she had to go through the motions a second time, and this resulted in the birth of another son Iphicles a day later, known as the brother of Hercules. The Greek name Heracles gave way to the more popular Roman version which has endured to this day.

The news of the birth of yet another love child reached the tired ears of Hera, the wife of Zeus and she once again set off on one of her jealous wife trips. She sent two poisonous snakes to the crib of the babe which the aforementioned babe squeezed to death and played with till he grew weary and took a nap. Hera threatened, “I’ll be back,” and continued to torment Hercules right into his adulthood. The handsome young man soon met and married Megara, the daughter of King Creon, while on of his expeditions and they soon had a happy family saga going.

But Hera had neither forgotten nor forgiven Hercules the sins of his father, and send a frenzy to haunt him. This caused him to kill his family and rant like a madman. When he came out of his frenzy the poor chap went out of his mind with remorse. On the verge of suicide he appealed to Apollo for guidance and was told to do penance by performing twelve tasks for Eurystheus who was a distant relative. Hercules completed every one of them exhibiting great strength, presence of mind, and patience.

He was absolved of his crime and went on to marry Deianira in a bid to start a new life. But a robe she presented him doused in what she believed was a love potion, eventually poisoned him and he was in a great deal of pain. It proved intolerable for him and he stepped into a burning pyre to end his misery. But Zeus intervened and decided enough was enough. He brought him up to Olympus, implored Hera to leave him alone, and proceeded to crown him immortal.

Hebe

Hebe

In Greek mythology, Hebe is the beautiful daughter of Zeus and Hera and a little less known than most of her other siblings due to a life practically devoid of scandalous escapades. She is the goddess of youth in its various forms—eternal youth, bridal youth, and renewed youth. She was the official cup bearer to Zeus and all other gods. It was her job to go around with a pitcher and make sure everyone received their share of nectar or ambrosia. Now she had a male counterpart known as Ganymede. They were not really rivals, strictly speaking, but when two people are employed on the same level, there’s bound to be a one-up-man-ship going on behind the scenes. Minor slip-ups can cause major upheavals and that’s what happened to Hebe.

Once while attending to the gods, Hebe literally slipped and fell. This may spell a bad day in the world of supermodels, but for a goddess it spelt doom. She was unceremoniously dismissed from her post, and guess who was elevated to the post of sole pitcher bearer. Ganymede was a Trojan boy kidnapped by Zeus while playing on Mount Ida, and now he got to fill the post left vacant by Hebe. This displacement is depicted in a sarcophagus where Ganymede is depicted as giving a drink to an eagle, while Hebe lies upon the ground, disgraced.

Once her stint as a career woman met with the glass ceiling, Hebe turned her attention to domestic bliss as the consort of the hero turned immortal, Heracles or Hercules. Born to Zeus and his mortal lover, Alcmene, Heracles had been at the receiving end of Hera’s vengeance right from the crib. But at the end of his strife-torn life, Zeus decide to bring him up to Mount Olympus and grant him immortality. Hebe’s mother, Hera called off her vendetta against the hapless hero once he was purged of the mortal element that was inherited from his mortal mother Alcmene. Hebe and Heracles had two sons Alexiares and Anicetus.

Hebe is also known to have very good relations with her mother, Hera and brother, Ares. Household chores such as escorting Hera to her chariot or drawing a bath for her brother after a hard day as the god of war and strife did not seem to unduly upset her goddess status. Being the goddess of youth, she is known to have granted the gift of youth to old Iolaus, Heracles’ charioteer, for the duration of their fight against Eurystheus.