Biographies Characteristics Analysis

Why Hercules? Hercules is considered the founder of the Olympic Games

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Alcmene. To woo Alcmene, Zeus took the form of her husband. Zeus' wife Hera made her husband promise that the one who would be born at a certain time would become a great king. Despite the fact that it was Hercules who was supposed to be at the appointed hour, Hera intervened in the process, as a result of which Hercules’ cousin named Eurystheus was born earlier. Nevertheless, Zeus agreed with Hera that Hercules would not obey his cousin forever, but would carry out only twelve of his orders. It was these acts that later became the famous 12 labors of Hercules.

Ancient Greek myths attribute many deeds to Hercules: from a campaign with the Argonauts to the construction of the city of Gytion together with the god Apollo.

Hera could not forgive Zeus for betraying him, but she took out her anger on Hercules. For example, she sent madness to him, and Hercules, in a fit, killed his own, born to the daughter of the king of Thebes, Megara. The prophetess from the temple of Apollo in Delphi said that in order to atone for his terrible act, Hercules must carry out the instructions of Eurystheus, who was jealous of Hercules’ strength and came up with very difficult tests.

The painful death of a hero

In twelve years, Hercules completed all of his cousin’s tasks, gaining freedom. The further life of the hero was also full of exploits, the content and number of which depend on the authors of specific myths, since there are quite a lot of ancient Greek monuments.

Most authors agree that, having defeated the river god Achelous, Hercules won the hand of Deianira, the daughter of Dionysus. One day, Dejanira was kidnapped by the centaur Nessus, who admired her beauty. Nessus carried travelers across a stormy river on his back, and when Hercules and Deianira approached the river, he put his wife on the centaur and went swimming.

Nessus tried to escape with Dejanira on his back, but Hercules wounded him with an arrow poisoned with the most powerful poison in the world - Lernaean bile, which he killed while carrying out the second order of Eurystheus. Nessus, dying, advised Dejanira to collect his blood, lying that it could be used as a love potion.

Earlier, Hercules mortally wounded his teacher and friend the centaur Chiron with an arrow poisoned by hydra bile.

Some time later, Dejanira tells that Hercules wants to marry one of his captives. Having soaked the cloak in Nessus's blood, she sent it as a gift to her husband to return his love. As soon as Hercules put on his cloak, the poison entered his body, causing terrible torment.

To get rid of suffering, Hercules uproots trees, builds a huge fire out of them, and lies down on. According to legend, the hero’s friend Philoctetes agreed to set the funeral pyre on fire, for which Hercules promised him his bow and poisoned arrows.

It is believed that Hercules died at the age of fifty, after his death he was accepted among the immortals and ascended to Olympus, where he finally reconciled with Hera and even married her daughter.

We all know that Hercules is some kind of ancient Greek hero who performed 12 labors. However, few people remember and know how difficult and contradictory his path really was.

How was Hercules, aka Alcides, aka Hercules, born (in Italy)

Surely, many will now remember that our hero’s father was Zeus (the supreme god from Mount Olympus in Greek mythology), and his mother was a simple mortal woman, Alcmene.

The Greek gods have always been distinguished by their human and sometimes impartial essence.

Zeus once imprisoned the titans in the underworld - the children of Uranus (god of the sky) and Gaia (goddess of the earth), who were deities personifying the natural destructive elements.

Offended by Gaia, she persuaded the children to rebel against Zeus again and destroy not only Olympus, but all of humanity.

The giants began to throw stones and burning trees into the sky, they were so angry. Then Zeus's wife Hera and the goddesses of fate told the other gods that the Titans could only be defeated with the help of a mortal hero.

Then Zeus realized that he needed a demigod son who would help him defeat the giants and win the war. The choice falls on Alcmene. The insidious Zeus stops time, takes the form of Alcmene's husband, and for three days the world remains in a state of timelessness. This is how Hercules was conceived.

Time passed, and on the night of our hero’s birth, angry at her husband’s betrayal, Hera forces Zeus to swear an oath that the baby born that night from the clan of Perseus will become the supreme king.

Zeus is sure that Hercules will become him, but Hera turns out to be more cunning - she slows down Alcmene’s birth. That night, our hero's cousin Eurystheus is born first. Then Zeus has to enter into a new agreement with Hera.

Hercules will obey Eurystheus until he completes 10 (!) labors. Once the demigod fulfills the terms of the contract, he will become both free and immortal. This is what we agreed on.

You can often find a myth about how, as a baby, Hercules killed two snakes. According to one version, Hera sent them to kill him. According to another, Alkmena’s husband planted them in order to understand which of the children was a demigod.

Hercules grew up, matured, got married, but Hera still did not forgive her husband’s betrayal. She sends her husband's hated son into madness, in which he destroys his entire family and his brother's children. Having woken up and realizing what he had done, Hercules goes to the oracle, who sends him to his brother to atone for his deeds with feats.

In fact, our hero had only 10 labors to perform, but the king did not accept 2 of them, so Hercules was forced to do 2 more, thus making 12.

The sequence of his exploits varies in different sources, but among them was a completely unarmed fight with the Nemean Lion, and a deft victory over the Lernaean Hydra, and the expulsion of the Stymphalian birds, which have terrifying metallic plumage.

The labors of Hercules also included:

  1. Catching the Keryneian fallow deer.U
  2. slaying of the fierce Erymanthian boar.
  3. Cleaning the stables of King Augius from manure.
  4. Confrontation with the Cretan bull, which was the father of the well-known Minotaur.

And Hercules was able to:

  • subjugate the man-eating mares of King Diodemus;
  • steal the belt from the main Amazon, Hippolyta;
  • kidnap and bring to Mycenae the cows that he took from the three-headed giant Geryon;
  • get golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides;
  • bring the chief guard of the god Hades, the three-headed dog Cerberus, from the kingdom of the dead and deliver him to Tiryns.

In fact, Hercules was famous not only for these exploits; he had many valiant deeds behind him, with which the legends and myths of Ancient Greece are full.

How did Hercules get to Olympus?

One day, while defending his wife Dejanira from a centaur named Nessus, he killed him with a poisoned arrow. Nessus, dying, inspired the wife of Hercules that his blood had the properties of a love potion.

Deianira, terribly jealous of her husband for another girl, saves some of the deceased’s blood for herself, and subsequently soaks her shirt and gives it to her husband.

The blood of the centaur causes Hercules unbearable torment, and he literally steps into the fire, from where Zeus takes him. So Hercules became a god.

Hercules is a forced hero, a demigod who was able to get to Olympus, a victim of politics, intrigue and Zeus’s thirst to maintain power.

Hercules (Heraclius, Alcides), Greek, Lat. Hercules- son of Zeus and, the greatest hero of Greek legends. By the way, the name of Hercule Poirot, for example, is also from “Hercules”.

His name (usually in its Latinized form) is usually used when one wants to emphasize the enormous height or enormous physical strength of a person. But Hercules was not only a hero. This was a man with human weaknesses and positive qualities, who without hesitation entered into a struggle with fate and used his abilities not only for the sake of his own glory, but also to benefit humanity, to save it from troubles and suffering. He accomplished more than other people, but he also suffered more, which is why he was a hero. For this he received the reward that his Babylonian predecessor Gilgamesh or the Phoenician Melqart had vainly sought; For him, the most impossible dream of man came true - he became immortal.

Hercules was born in Thebes, where his mother Alcmene fled with her husband, who had killed his father-in-law Electryon and feared the revenge of his brother Sthenelus. Of course, Zeus knew about the upcoming birth of Hercules - not only because he was an omniscient god, but also because he was directly related to his birth. The fact is that Zeus really liked Alcmene, and he, taking the guise of Amphitryon, freely entered her bedroom. On the day when Hercules was supposed to be born, Zeus recklessly declared in the meeting of the gods that today the greatest hero would be born. She immediately realized that we were talking about the consequences of her husband’s next love affair, and decided to take revenge on him. Allegedly doubting his prediction, she provoked him into an oath that the one born on this day would rule over all his relatives, even if they were from the family of Zeus. After which, with the help of Ilithyia, Hera accelerated the birth of Nikippa, the wife of Sthenel, although she was only in her seventh month, and delayed the birth of Alcmene. This is how it happened that the mighty Hercules, the son of the almighty Zeus, had to serve the wretched half-baked Eurystheus, the son of the mortal Sthenel - a sad fate, but a true hero is able to overcome this injustice of fate.

Still from the film "Hercules"

Alcmene's son was named Alcides at birth in honor of his step-grandfather, . Only later was he called Hercules, because he supposedly “thanks to Hera achieved glory” (this is the traditional, although not entirely conclusive, interpretation of his name). In this case, Hera turned out to be the hero’s benefactor against her will: she plotted all sorts of intrigues for him to take revenge for her husband’s betrayal, and Hercules, overcoming them, accomplished one feat after another. To begin with, Hera sent two monstrous snakes to his cradle, but the baby Hercules strangled them. Shocked by this, Amphitryon realized that such a child was capable of doing great things over time, and decided to give him a proper upbringing. The best teachers taught Hercules: the son of Zeus Castor taught him combat with weapons, and the Echalian king Eurytus taught him archery. He was taught wisdom by the fair Radamanthos, and music and singing by the brother of Orpheus himself, Lin. Hercules was a diligent student, but playing the cithara was worse for him than other sciences. When one day Lin decided to punish him, he hit him back with a lyre and killed him on the spot. Amphitryon was horrified by his strength and decided to send Hercules away from people. He sent him to graze cattle on Mount Cithaeron, and Hercules took it for granted.

Hercules lived well on Kiferon; there he killed a formidable lion that was killing people and livestock, and made himself an excellent cloak from its skin. In his eighteenth year, Hercules decided to look at the world and at the same time look for a wife. He made himself a club from the trunk of a huge ash tree, threw the skin of the Cythaeronian lion (whose head served as his helmet) over his shoulders and headed for his native Thebes.

On the way, he met strangers and from their conversation learned that they were tribute collectors from the Orkhomen king Ergin. They went to Thebes to receive from the Theban king Creon one hundred oxen - an annual tribute imposed on him by Ergin by right of the strongest. This seemed unfair to Hercules, and when the collectors began to mock him in response to his words, he dealt with them in his own way: he cut off their noses and ears, tied their hands and ordered them to go home. Thebes enthusiastically greeted their fellow countryman, but their joy did not last long. Ergin and his army appeared in front of the city gates. Hercules led the defense of the city, defeated Ergin and obliged him to return to Thebes twice as much as he had received from them. For this, King Creon gave him his daughter Megara and half of the palace as his wife. Hercules remained in Thebes, became the father of three sons and considered himself the happiest man in the world.

But the hero’s happiness does not lie in a peaceful life, and Hercules soon had to be convinced of this.

Illustrated: the labors of Hercules, reconstruction of the metopes of the Temple of Zeus at Olympia, 470-456. BC. Top row: Nemean lion, Lernaean hydra, Stymphalian birds; second row: Cretan bull, Cerynean doe, belt of Queen Hippolyta; third row: Erymanthian boar, horses of Diomedes, giant Geryon; bottom row: golden apples of the Hesperides, Kerberos, cleaning the Augean stables.

While he was a shepherd, Hera believed that everything was going as it should. But as soon as he became the royal son-in-law, she decided to intervene. She could not deprive him of his power, but what could be worse than power not controlled by the mind? So, Hera sent madness upon him, in a fit of which Hercules killed his sons and two children of his half-brother Iphicles. What made it even worse was that Hera then restored his sanity. Heartbroken, Hercules went to Delphi to find out how he could cleanse himself of the taint of involuntary murder. Through the mouth of the Pythia, God told Hercules that he should go to the Mycenaean king Eurystheus and enter into his service. If Hercules completes the twelve tasks that Eurystheus entrusts to him, shame and guilt will be removed from him, and he will become immortal.

Hercules obeyed. He went to Argos, settled in his father’s castle of Tiryns near Mycenae (truly this dwelling was worthy of Hercules: with its walls 10-15 m thick, Tiryns remains the most indestructible fortress in the world to this day) and expressed his readiness to serve Eurystheus. The powerful figure of Hercules instilled such fear in Eurystheus that he did not dare to personally entrust him with anything and conveyed all orders to Hercules through his herald Copreus. But the more fearlessly he came up with tasks for him: one more difficult than the other.

Nemean lion

Eurystheus did not make Hercules bored for long while waiting for work. Hercules was ordered to kill a lion that lived in the neighboring Nemean mountains and instilled terror in the entire area, since it was twice the size of an ordinary lion and had an impenetrable skin. Hercules found his lair (this cave is still shown to tourists today), stunned the lion with a blow from his club, strangled him, threw him over his shoulders and brought him to Mycenae. Eurystheus was numb with horror: the incredible strength of the servant frightened him even more than the dead lion thrown at his feet. Instead of gratitude, he forbade Hercules to appear in Mycenae: from now on, let him show “material evidence” in front of the city gates, and he, Eurystheus, will control them from above. Now let Hercules immediately set off to carry out a new assignment - it’s time to kill the Hydra!

Lernaean Hydra

It was a monster with the body of a snake and nine dragon heads, one of which was immortal. lived in the swamps near the city of Lerna in Argolis and devastated the surrounding area. People were powerless before her. Hercules found out that Hydra has an assistant, Karkin, a huge crayfish with sharp claws. Then he also took with him an assistant, the youngest son of his brother Iphicles, the brave Iolaus. First of all, Hercules set fire to the forest behind the Lernaean swamps to cut off Hydra’s path to retreat, then heated the arrows in the fire and began the battle. The fiery arrows only irritated the Hydra; she rushed at Hercules and immediately lost one of her heads, but two new ones grew in its place. In addition, cancer came to the aid of Hydra. But when he grabbed Hercules’ leg, Iolaus killed him with a precise blow. While Hydra looked around in bewilderment in search of her assistant, Hercules uprooted the burning tree and burned one of its heads: a new one did not grow in its place. Now Hercules knew how to get down to business: he cut off the heads, one by one, and Iolaus burned the necks before new heads could grow from the embryos. The last, despite desperate resistance, Hercules chopped off and burned the immortal head of the Hydra. Hercules immediately buried the charred remains of this head in the ground and rolled it over with a huge stone. Just in case, he cut the dead Hydra into pieces, and tempered his arrows in its bile; Since then, the wounds inflicted by them have become incurable. Accompanied by the inhabitants of the liberated region, Hercules and Iolaus returned victoriously to Mycenae. But in front of the Lion Gate the herald Copreus was already standing with a new order: to clear the land of Stymphalian birds.

Stymphalian birds

These birds were found near Lake Stymphalian and devastated the surrounding area worse than locusts. Their claws and feathers were made of hard copper, and they could shed these feathers on the fly like their modern distant relatives - bombers. Fighting them from the ground was a hopeless task, as they immediately showered the enemy with a shower of their deadly feathers. So Hercules climbed a tall tree, scared the birds away with a rattle, and began shooting them down with his bow one after another as they circled around the tree, dropping copper arrows to the ground. Finally, in fear, they flew far over the sea.

Kerynean fallow deer

After the expulsion of the Stymphalian birds, Hercules was faced with a new task: to catch a doe with golden horns and copper legs, who lived in Keryneia (on the border of Achaea and Arcadia) and belonged to Artemis. Eurystheus hoped that the powerful goddess would be angry with Hercules and force him to humble himself. Catching this doe was no small matter, as she was timid and quick as the wind. Hercules pursued her for a whole year until he managed to get within shooting distance. Having wounded the doe, Hercules caught her and brought her to Mycenae. He asked Artemis for forgiveness for his act and brought her a rich sacrifice, which appeased the goddess.

Erymanthian boar

The next task was of the same kind: it was necessary to catch the Erymanthian boar, which was ravaging the outskirts of the city of Psofis and killing many people with its huge tusks. Hercules drove the boar into deep snow, tied it up and brought it to Mycenae alive. Eurystheus, out of fear of the monstrous beast, hid in a barrel and from there begged Hercules to get away with the boar as soon as possible - for this, he supposedly would entrust him with a less dangerous task: to clean out the stable of the Elisian king Augeas.

Augean stables

What is true is true, Hercules had a safe job, but they were huge, and there was so much manure and all kinds of dirt accumulated in the barn... it was not for nothing that this barn (or stable) became a proverb. Cleaning this barn was a superhuman task. Hercules offered the king to restore order in one day if he received a tenth of the royal cattle for this. Augeas agreed, and Hercules immediately got down to business, relying not so much on his strength as on his intelligence. He drove all the cattle out to pasture, dug a canal leading to and Peneus, and diverted the water of these two rivers into it. The gushing water cleared the barn, after which all that remained was to block the channel and again drive the cattle into the stalls. However, King Augeas meanwhile learned that this work had previously been entrusted to Hercules by Eurystheus, and under this pretext he refused to reward Hercules. In addition, he insulted the hero, saying that it was not appropriate for the son of Zeus to earn extra money by cleaning other people's cowsheds. Hercules was not one of those who forget such grievances: a few years later, freed from service with Eurystheus, he invaded Elis with a large army, ravaged the possessions of Augeas, and killed him himself. In honor of this victory, Hercules founded the Olympic Games.

Cretan bull

The next assignment brought Hercules to Crete. Eurystheus ordered the delivery of a wild bull that had escaped from the Cretan king Minos to Mycenae. It was the best bull in the royal herd, and Minos promised to sacrifice it to Poseidon. But Minos did not want to part with such a magnificent specimen, and instead he sacrificed another bull. Poseidon did not allow himself to be tricked and, in retaliation, sent rabies onto the hidden bull. Hercules not only caught the bull that was ravaging the island, but also tamed it, and it obediently transported it on its back from Crete to Argolis.

Horses of Diomedes

Then Hercules sailed to Thrace (but already on a ship) to bring Eurystheus the fierce horses that the Biston king Diomedes fed with human meat. With the help of several of his friends, Hercules obtained horses and brought them to his ship. However, Diomedes and his army overtook him there. Leaving the horses in the care of his father, Hercules defeated the Bistons in a fierce battle and killed Diomedes, but in the meantime the wild horses tore Abdera to pieces. When the deeply saddened Hercules delivered the horses to Mycenae, Eurystheus released them - just as he had previously released the Cretan bull.

But neither grief nor neglect of the results of his labors broke Hercules. Without hesitation, he went to the island of Erithia to bring from there a herd of cattle that belonged to the three-body giant Geryon.

Giant Geryon

This island was located far to the west, where the land ended in a narrow isthmus. With his mighty club, Hercules divided the isthmus in half and placed two stone pillars along the edges of the resulting strait (in the ancient world, present-day Gibraltar was called nothing less than the Pillars of Hercules). He came to the western edge of the world just at the time when he was in his solar chariot to the Ocean. To escape from the unbearable heat, Hercules was ready to shoot an arrow at Helios. The reaction of the gods is unpredictable: admiring the courage of the hero who aimed his bow at him, Helios not only did not get angry, but even lent him his golden boat, on which Hercules sailed to Erythia. There he was attacked by the two-headed dog Orff and the giant Eurytion, who were guarding Geryon's herds. Hercules had no choice - he had to kill both, and then Geryon himself. Having endured many misadventures, Hercules drove the herd to the Peloponnese. On the way, he defeated the strongman Eryx, who stole one cow from him, and the giant Kaka, who stole part of his herd. When Hercules was already hoping that he would safely reach Mycenae, Hera instilled madness in the cows, and they ran away in all directions. Hercules had to work hard to round up the entire herd again. Eurystheus sacrificed cows to the eternal opponent of Hercules - Hera.

Belt of the Amazon Queen Hippolyta

The next feat of Hercules was an expedition to the country of female warriors - the Amazons, from where he was supposed to bring Admete, the daughter of Eurystheus, the belt of Hippolyta. Hercules went there with a small detachment consisting of his friends, and on the way stopped in Mysia, where King Lycus, known for his hospitality, reigned. During the feast arranged by Lik in their honor, warlike Bebriks invaded the city. Hercules got up from the table, together with his friends expelled the Bebriks, killed their king, and donated all their land to Lycus, who named it Heraclea in honor of Hercules. With his victory he gained such fame that Queen Hippolyta herself came out to meet him to voluntarily give him her belt. But then Hera began to spread rumors about Hercules that he intended to take Hippolyta into slavery, and the Amazons believed her. They attacked the detachment of Hercules, and the Greeks had no choice but to take up arms. They eventually defeated the Amazons and captured many of them, including their two leaders, Melanippe and Antiope. Hippolyta returned Melanipa's freedom, giving Hercules her belt for this, and Hercules gave Antiope to his friend Theseus as a reward for his bravery. In addition, he knew that Theseus wanted to take her as his wife (this is what Theseus did upon returning to Athens).

Hellhound Kerber

So, Hercules performed ten labors, although Eurystheus at first refused to count the murder of the Lernaean Hydra (under the pretext that Hercules used the help of Iolaus) and the cleansing of the Augean stable (since Hercules demanded payment from Augeas). The eleventh mission led Hercules to the underworld. Eurystheus demanded that Kerberus himself be presented to him - no more and no less. It was truly a hellish dog: three-headed, snakes writhing around its neck, and its tail ended in a dragon's head with a disgusting mouth. Although until then no one had returned from the afterlife alive, Hercules did not hesitate. The gods were impressed by his courage, and they decided to help him. Hermes, the guide of the souls of the dead, brought him to the Tenar gorge (at the present Cape Matapan, in the extreme south of the Peloponnese and the entire European continent), where there was a secret entrance to the kingdom of the dead, and then Athena accompanied him. After a terrible journey, on which he met the shadows of dead friends and slain enemies, Hercules appeared before the throne. Hades listened favorably to the son of Zeus and without any reason allowed him to catch and take away Kerberus, provided that he did not use weapons. True, Kerber himself has not yet said his word. The guardian of the underworld fought back with teeth and nails (or rather, claws), beat his tail with a dragon's head and howled so terribly that the souls of the dead rushed in confusion throughout the afterlife. After a short struggle, Hercules squeezed him with such force that the half-strangled Cerberus calmed down and promised to unquestioningly follow him to Mycenae. At the sight of this monster, Eurystheus fell to his knees (according to another version, he again hid in a barrel or in a large clay vessel for grain) and conjured Hercules to do mercy: return this hellish creature to its rightful place.

Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini "Hercules in the Garden of the Hesperides"

Golden apples of the Hesperides

The last task remained: Eurystheus ordered Hercules to tell him that he must bring him three golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides, daughters of the Hesperides, who, for rebelling against the gods, was doomed to forever support the vault of heaven. Nobody knew where these gardens were. It was only known that the way to them was guarded by the ever-watchful dragon Ladon, who does not know defeat in the fight and kills all the vanquished, and finally by Atlas himself. Hercules headed to Egypt, walked through Libya and all the lands familiar to him from the time of his trip to Erithia, but he never found the gardens of the Hesperides. Only when he came to the farthest north, to the endless waters of Eridanus, the nymphs there advised him to turn to the sea god Nereus - he knows and can tell everything, but he must be forced to do it. Hercules waylaid Nereus, attacked him and after a stubborn struggle (all the more difficult since the sea god kept changing his appearance) tied him up. He let him go only when he learned everything he needed to know. The Gardens of the Hesperides were located in the far west, somewhere between today's Morocco and southern France. Again Hercules had to go through Libya, where he was met by Antaeus, the son of the earth goddess Gaia. According to his custom, the giant immediately challenged Hercules to single combat. Hercules avoided defeat only because during the struggle he guessed where the giant got his strength from: feeling tired, he fell to mother earth, and she poured new strength into him. Therefore, Hercules tore him off the ground and lifted him into the air. Antaeus became weak, and Hercules strangled him. Continuing his journey, Hercules again and again overcame the obstacles and traps that robbers and rulers prepared for travelers. He also escaped the fate that the Egyptians intended for all foreigners, who sacrificed them to the gods. Finally, Hercules came to Atlas and explained to him the purpose of his coming. With suspicious readiness, Atlas volunteered to personally bring apples to Hercules if in the meantime he would hold the vault of heaven on his shoulders. Hercules had no choice - he agreed. Atlas kept his promise and even offered to deliver the apples directly to Mycenae, promising to return immediately. Cunning can only be overcome by cunning: Hercules apparently agreed, but asked Atlas to hold the vault of heaven while he made himself a backing so that the pressure on his shoulders would not be felt. As soon as Atlas took his usual place, Hercules took the apples, kindly thanked him for the service - and stopped only in Mycenae. Eurystheus could not believe his eyes and, in confusion, returned the apples to Hercules. He donated them to Athena, and she returned them to the Hesperides. The twelfth task was completed, and Hercules received freedom.

The life and death of Hercules after completing the twelve labors

Soon Hercules became free in another sense: he generously gave up his wife Megara to Iolaus, who in his absence, like a faithful friend, consoled her and became so accustomed to her that he could no longer live without her. After which Hercules left Thebes, with which nothing now connected him, and returned to Tiryns. But not for long. There, new machinations of the goddess Hera awaited him, and with them new sufferings and new exploits.

It is not known exactly whether Hera instilled in him a desire for a new wife or aroused in him an ambitious desire to defeat the best archer in Hellas, the Echalian king Eurytus. However, both were closely interconnected, since Eurytus proclaimed that he would give his daughter, the fair-haired beauty Iola, as a wife only to the one who defeats him in archery. So, Hercules went to Echalia (most likely it was in Messenia, according to Sophocles - on Euboea), appeared at the palace of his former teacher, fell in love with his daughter at first sight, and the next day defeated him in a competition. But Eurytus, stung by the fact that he was disgraced by his own student, declared that he would not give his daughter to the one who was a slave to the cowardly Eurystheus. Hercules was offended and went to look for a new wife. He found her in distant Calydon: she was the beautiful Deianira, daughter of King Oeneus.

He didn’t get her easily: to do this, Hercules had to defeat her former fiancé, the powerful, in single combat, who could also turn into a snake and a bull. After the wedding, the newlyweds remained in the palace of Oeneus, but Hera did not leave Hercules alone. She darkened his mind, and at a feast he killed the son of his friend Architelos. Actually, Hercules just wanted to slap him on the head for pouring water intended for washing his feet on his hands. But Hercules did not calculate his strength, and the boy fell dead. True, Architelos forgave him, but Hercules did not want to stay in Calydon and went with Deianira to Tiryns.

During the journey they came to the Evenu River. There was no bridge across it, and those wishing to cross were transported for a reasonable fee by the centaur Nessus. Hercules entrusted Dejanira with Nessus, and he himself swam across the river. Meanwhile, the centaur, captivated by Deianira's beauty, tried to kidnap her. But he was overtaken by the deadly arrow of Hercules. The bile of the Lernaean Hydra poisoned the blood of the centaur, and he soon died. And yet, before his death, he managed to take revenge: Nessus advised Deianira to save his blood and rub Hercules’ clothes with it if he suddenly stopped loving Deianira, and then Hercules’ love would immediately return to her. In Tiryns, it seemed to Dejanira that she would never need “love blood.” The couple lived in peace and harmony, raising their five children - until Hera again intervened in the fate of Hercules.

By a strange coincidence, simultaneously with the departure of Hercules from Ehalia, King Eurytus’ herd of cattle disappeared. Autolycus stole it. But this one, in order to divert suspicion, pointed to Hercules, who supposedly wanted to take revenge on the king for the insult. All of Ehalia believed this slander - with the exception of Eurytus's eldest son, Iphitus. To prove the innocence of Hercules, he himself went in search of the herd, which led him to Argos; and since he got there, he decided to look into Tiryns. Hercules warmly welcomed him, but when during the feast he heard what Eurytus suspected him of, he became angry, and Hera instilled in him such uncontrollable anger that he threw Iphitus from the city wall. This was no longer just murder, but a violation of the sacred law of hospitality. Even Zeus was angry with his son and sent him a serious illness.

The anguished Hercules, straining his last strength, went to Delphi to ask Apollo how he could atone for his guilt. But the Pythia soothsayer did not give him an answer. Then Hercules, losing his temper, took away from her the tripod from which she proclaimed her prophecies - they say, since she does not fulfill her duties, then the tripod is of no use to her. Apollo immediately appeared and demanded the return of the tripod. Hercules refused, and the two mighty sons of Zeus started a fight like little children, until their thunder father separated them with lightning and forced them to make peace. Apollo ordered the Pythia to give advice to Hercules, and she announced that Hercules should be sold into slavery for three years, and the proceeds should be given to Euryta as a ransom for her murdered son.

Thus, Hercules again had to part with freedom. He was sold to the Lydian queen Omphale, an arrogant and cruel woman who humiliated him in every possible way. She even forced him to weave with her maids, while she herself walked in front of him in his skin of the lion of Cythaeron. From time to time she let him go for a while - not out of kindness, but so that upon his return the slave's lot would be all the more burdensome to him.

Hercules at Omphale. Painting by Lucas Cranach

During one of these vacations, Hercules participated in, another time he visited the Aulidian king Sileus, who forced every foreigner to work in his vineyard. One day, when he fell asleep in a grove near Ephesus, the dwarfs Kerkops (or Dactyls) attacked him and stole his weapons. At first, Hercules wanted to thoroughly teach them a lesson, but they were so weak and funny that he set them free. Hercules himself invariably returned to his slave service.

Finally the last day of the third year arrived, and Hercules received his weapons and freedom from Omphale. The hero parted with her without anger and even granted her request to leave her a descendant as a keepsake (born of Hercules subsequently ascended to the Lydian throne). Returning to his homeland, Hercules gathered his faithful friends and began to prepare to pay off old scores. King Augeas was the first to pay for the long-standing insult, then it was the turn of the Trojan king Laomedon.

After all these deeds, is it any wonder that the glory of Hercules reached the snowy peaks of Olympus? But this was not all that he did. For example, he freed the titan Prometheus, snatched Alcestis from the hands of the god of death Thanatos, defeated many enemies, robbers and proud people, for example, Cycnus. Hercules founded a number of cities, the most famous of them being Heraclea (Herculaneum) near Vesuvius. He made many wives happy with offspring (for example, after the first night spent by the Argonauts on Lemnos, at least fifty Lemnian women called him the father of their sons). Ancient authors had doubts about some of his other achievements and deeds, so we will not dwell on them. However, all the authors unanimously admit that he had an honor that no other mortal had been granted - Zeus himself asked him for help!

A still from one of the many TV series and films about Hercules (Hercules). Actor Kevin Sorbo plays Hercules.

This happened during the Gigantomachy - the battle of the gods with the giants. In this battle on the Phlegrean fields, the Olympian gods had a hard time, since the giants had incredible strength, and their mother, the earth goddess Gaia, gave them a magic herb that made them invulnerable to the weapons of the gods (but not mortals). When the scales were already tipping towards the giants, Zeus sent Athena for Hercules. Hercules did not have to be persuaded for long; Hearing his father's call, he eagerly hurried to the battlefield. The most powerful of the giants was crushed first, and then, with exemplary interaction with the Olympic team of gods, all the other rebels were killed. By this, Hercules gained the gratitude of not only the gods, but also people. For all his shortcomings, Zeus was still much better than his predecessors Kronos and Uranus, not to mention the primordial Chaos.

Upon returning from the Phlegrean fields, Hercules decided to repay the last of his old debts. He went on a campaign against Ehalia, conquered it and killed Eurytus, who had once insulted him. Among the captives, Hercules saw fair-haired Iola and was again inflamed with love for her. Having learned about this, Dejanira immediately remembered the dying words of Nessus, rubbed the tunic of Hercules with his blood and, through the ambassador Lichas, handed the tunic to Hercules, who was still in Ehalia. As soon as Hercules put on the tunic, the poison of the Lernaean Hydra, which poisoned the blood of Nessus, penetrated the body of Hercules, causing him unbearable torment. When he was brought on a stretcher to the palace to Dejanira, she was already dead - having learned that her husband was dying in agony through her fault, she pierced herself with a sword.

Unbearable suffering led Hercules to the idea of ​​giving up his life of his own free will. Obeying Hercules, his friends built a huge fire on Mount Ete and laid the hero on it, but no one wanted to set the fire on fire, no matter how Hercules begged them. Finally, young Philoctetes made up his mind, and as a reward, Hercules gave him his bow and arrows. A fire flared up from the torch of Philoctetes, but the lightning of Zeus the Thunderer shone even brighter. Together with lightning, Athena and Hermes flew to the fire and carried Hercules to heaven in a golden chariot. All of Olympus greeted the greatest of heroes, even Hera overcame her old hatred and gave him her daughter as his wife, forever. Zeus called him to the table of the gods, invited him to taste nectar and ambrosia, and as a reward for all his exploits and sufferings, declared Hercules immortal.

Still from the cartoon “Hercules and Xena: Battle for Olympus”

Zeus' decision remains in force to this day: Hercules truly became immortal. He lives on in legends and sayings, he is still the model of a hero (and as a true hero, he inevitably has negative traits), the Olympic Games are still held, which he is said to have founded in memory of his victory over Augeas or on his return Argonauts from Colchis. And he still lives in the heavens: on a starry night, the constellation Hercules can be seen with the naked eye. The Greeks and Romans revered him as the greatest of heroes and dedicated cities, temples and altars to him. The creations of ancient and modern artists glorify him. Hercules is the most frequently depicted image of ancient myths and any legends in general.

The oldest known sculptural image of Hercules - “Hercules fights the Hydra” (c. 570 BC) - is kept in Athens, in the Acropolis Museum. Among the other numerous works of Greek sculpture, metopes from the temple “C” in Selinunte (c. 540 BC) and 12 metopes depicting the labors of Hercules from the temple of Zeus in Olympia (470–456 BC) are known. Of the Roman sculptures, the most preserved copies are “Hercules” by Polykleitos and “Hercules fighting the lion” by Lysippos (one of them is in St. Petersburg, in the Hermitage). Several wall images of Hercules were preserved even in the Christian catacombs of Rome (mid-4th century AD).

Of the architectural structures traditionally associated with the name of Hercules, the most ancient Greek temple in Sicily, in Akragante (6th century BC), is usually named in first place. In Rome, two temples were dedicated to Hercules, one under the Capitol, the second behind the Circus Maximus near the Tiber. Altars of Hercules stood in almost every Greek and Roman city.

Scenes from the life of Hercules were depicted by numerous European artists: Rubens, Poussin (“Landscape with Hercules and Cacus” - in Moscow, in the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts), Reni, Van Dyck, Delacroix and many others. There are a huge number of statues of Hercules by European sculptors; several of the best works migrated to Sweden and Austria from Czechoslovakia as a result of the Thirty Years' War and dynastic divisions.

Hercules Farnese and the statue of Hercules in the Hermitage

In literature, the oldest mentions of the exploits of Hercules (but not all) are contained in Homer; Subsequently, almost none of the ancient authors ignored Hercules. Sophocles dedicated the tragedy of “The Trachinian Woman” to the last period of Hercules’ life. Perhaps a little later, Euripides created the tragedy “Hercules” based on an unconventional version of the myth (which actually has many variants) - it still remains the best literary monument to Hercules. Among the works of modern times, we will name “The Choice of Hercules” by K. M. Wieland (1773), “Hercules and the Augean Stables” by Dürrenmatt (1954), “Hercules” by Matkovich (1962).

And finally, about the fate of Hercules in music. He was honored with their attention by J. S. Bach (cantata “Hercules at the Crossroads”, 1733), G. F. Handel (oratorio “Hercules”, 1745, which was later revised by him), C. Saint-Saens (symphonic poems “The Youth of Hercules” ", "The Spinning Wheel of Omphale", the opera "Dejanira").

Hercules (Hercules) is a synonym for strongman:

“What a giant he is presented here!
What shoulders! What a Hercules!..”

- A. S. Pushkin, “The Stone Guest” (1830).

Hercules (Heraclius, Alcides), Greek, Lat. Hercules- son of Zeus and Alcmene, the greatest hero of Greek legends.

His name (usually in its Latinized form) is usually used when one wants to emphasize the enormous height or enormous physical strength of a person. But Hercules was not only a hero. This was a man with human weaknesses and positive qualities, who without hesitation entered into a struggle with fate and used his abilities not only for the sake of his own glory, but also to benefit humanity, to save it from troubles and suffering. He accomplished more than other people, but he also suffered more, which is why he was a hero. For this he received the reward that his Babylonian predecessor Gilgamesh or the Phoenician Melqart had vainly sought; For him, the most impossible dream of man came true - he became immortal.

Hercules was born in Thebes, where his mother Alcmene fled with her husband Amphitryon, who had killed his father-in-law Electryon and feared the revenge of his brother Sthenelus. Of course, Zeus knew about the upcoming birth of Hercules - not only because he was an omniscient god, but also because he was directly related to his birth. The fact is that Zeus really liked Alcmene, and he, taking the guise of Amphitryon, freely entered her bedroom. On the day when Hercules was supposed to be born, Zeus recklessly declared in the meeting of the gods that today the greatest hero would be born. Jealous Hera immediately realized that we were talking about the consequences of her husband’s next love adventure, and decided to take revenge on him. Allegedly doubting his prediction, she provoked him into an oath that the one born on this day would rule over all his relatives, even if they were from the family of Zeus. After which, with the help of Ilithyia, Hera accelerated the birth of Nikippa, the wife of Sthenel, although she was only in her seventh month, and delayed the birth of Alcmene. This is how it happened that the mighty Hercules, the son of the omnipotent Zeus, had to serve the wretched bastard Eurystheus, the son of the mortal Sthenel - a sad fate, but a true hero is able to overcome this injustice of fate.

Alcmene's son was named Alcides at birth in honor of his step-grandfather, Alcaeus. Only later was he called Hercules, because he supposedly “thanks to Hera achieved glory” (this is the traditional, although not entirely conclusive, interpretation of his name). In this case, Hera turned out to be the hero’s benefactor against her will: she plotted all sorts of intrigues for him to take revenge for her husband’s betrayal, and Hercules, overcoming them, accomplished one feat after another. To begin with, Hera sent two monstrous snakes to his cradle, but the baby Hercules strangled them. Shocked by this, Amphitryon realized that such a child was capable of doing great things over time, and decided to give him a proper upbringing. The best teachers taught Hercules: the son of Zeus Castor taught him combat with weapons, and the Echalian king Eurytus taught him archery. He was taught wisdom by the just Radamanthos, and music and singing by the brother of Orpheus himself, Lin. Hercules was a diligent student, but playing the cithara was worse for him than other sciences. When one day Lin decided to punish him, he hit him back with a lyre and killed him on the spot. Amphitryon was horrified by his strength and decided to send Hercules away from people. He sent him to graze cattle on Mount Cithaeron, and Hercules took it for granted.

Hercules lived well on Kiferon; there he killed a formidable lion that was killing people and livestock, and made himself an excellent cloak from its skin. In his eighteenth year, Hercules decided to look at the world and at the same time look for a wife. He made himself a club from the trunk of a huge ash tree, threw the skin of the Cythaeronian lion (whose head served as his helmet) over his shoulders and headed for his native Thebes.

On the way, he met strangers and from their conversation learned that they were tribute collectors from the Orkhomen king Ergin. They went to Thebes to receive from the Theban king Creon one hundred oxen - an annual tribute imposed on him by Ergin by right of the strongest. Hercules thought this was unfair, and when the collectors began to mock him in response to his words, he dealt with them in his own way: he cut off their noses and ears, tied their hands and ordered them to go home. Thebes enthusiastically greeted their fellow countryman, but their joy did not last long. Ergin and his army appeared in front of the city gates. Hercules led the defense of the city, defeated Ergin and obliged him to return to Thebes twice as much as he had received from them. For this, King Creon gave him his daughter Megara and half of the palace as his wife. Hercules remained in Thebes, became the father of three sons and considered himself the happiest man in the world.

But the hero’s happiness does not lie in a peaceful life, and Hercules soon had to be convinced of this.

Illustrated: the labors of Hercules, reconstruction of the metopes of the Temple of Zeus at Olympia, 470-456. BC. Top row: Nemean lion, Lernaean gidka, Stymphalian birds; second row: Cretan bull, Cerynean doe, belt of Queen Hippolyta; third row: Erymanthian boar, horses of Diomedes, giant Geryon; bottom row: golden apples of the Hesperides, Kerberos, cleaning the Augean stables.

While he was a shepherd, Hera believed that everything was going as it should. But as soon as he became the royal son-in-law, she decided to intervene. She could not deprive him of his power, but what could be worse than power not controlled by the mind? So, Hera sent madness upon him, in a fit of which Hercules killed his sons and two children of his half-brother Iphicles. What made it even worse was that Hera then restored his sanity. Heartbroken, Hercules went to Delphi to find out from Apollo how he could cleanse himself of the taint of involuntary murder. Through the mouth of the Pythia, God told Hercules that he should go to the Mycenaean king Eurystheus and enter into his service. If Hercules completes the twelve tasks that Eurystheus entrusts to him, shame and guilt will be removed from him, and he will become immortal.

Hercules obeyed. He went to Argos, settled in his father’s castle of Tiryns near Mycenae (truly this dwelling was worthy of Hercules: with its walls 10-15 m thick, Tiryns remains the most indestructible fortress in the world to this day) and expressed his readiness to serve Eurystheus. The powerful figure of Hercules instilled such fear in Eurystheus that he did not dare to personally entrust him with anything and Hercules conveyed all orders through his herald Copreus. But the more fearlessly he came up with tasks for him: one more difficult than the other.

Nemean lion

Eurystheus did not make Hercules bored for long while waiting for work. Hercules was ordered to kill a lion that lived in the neighboring Nemean mountains and instilled terror in the entire area, since it was twice the size of an ordinary lion and had an impenetrable skin. Hercules found his lair (this cave is still shown to tourists today), stunned the lion with a blow from his club, strangled him, threw him over his shoulders and brought him to Mycenae. Eurystheus was numb with horror: the incredible strength of the servant frightened him even more than the dead lion thrown at his feet. Instead of gratitude, he forbade Hercules to appear in Mycenae: from now on, let him show “material evidence” in front of the city gates, and he, Eurystheus, will control them from above. Now let Hercules immediately set off to carry out a new assignment - it’s time to kill the Hydra!

Lernaean Hydra

It was a monster with the body of a snake and nine dragon heads, one of which was immortal. Hydra lived in the swamps near the city of Lerna in Argolis and devastated the surrounding area. People were powerless before her. Hercules found out that Hydra has an assistant, Karkin, a huge crayfish with sharp claws. Then he also took with him an assistant, the youngest son of his brother Iphicles, the brave Iolaus. First of all, Hercules set fire to the forest behind the Lernaean swamps to cut off Hydra’s path to retreat, then heated the arrows in the fire and began the battle. The fiery arrows only irritated the Hydra; she rushed at Hercules and immediately lost one of her heads, but two new ones grew in its place. In addition, cancer came to the aid of Hydra. But when he grabbed Hercules’ leg, Iolaus killed him with a precise blow. While Hydra looked around in bewilderment in search of her assistant, Hercules uprooted the burning tree and burned one of its heads: a new one did not grow in its place. Now Hercules knew how to get down to business: he cut off the heads, one by one, and Iolaus burned the necks before new heads could grow from the embryos. The last, despite desperate resistance, Hercules chopped off and burned the immortal head of the Hydra. Hercules immediately buried the charred remains of this head in the ground and rolled it over with a huge stone. Just in case, he cut the dead Hydra into pieces, and tempered his arrows in its bile; Since then, the wounds inflicted by them have become incurable. Accompanied by the inhabitants of the liberated region, Hercules and Iolaus returned victoriously to Mycenae. But in front of the Lion Gate the herald Copreus was already standing with a new order: to clear the land of Stymphalian birds.

Stymphalian birds

These birds were found near Lake Stymphalian in Arcadia and devastated the surrounding area worse than locusts. Their claws and feathers were made of hard copper, and they could shed these feathers on the fly like their modern distant relatives - bombers. Fighting them from the ground was a hopeless task, as they immediately showered the enemy with a shower of their deadly feathers. So Hercules climbed a tall tree, scared the birds away with a rattle, and began shooting them down with his bow one after another as they circled around the tree, dropping copper arrows to the ground. Finally, in fear, they flew far over the sea.

Kerynean fallow deer

After expelling the Stymphalian birds, Hercules was faced with a new task: to catch a doe with golden horns and copper legs, who lived in Keryneia (on the border of Achaea and Arcadia) and belonged to Artemis. Eurystheus hoped that the powerful goddess would be angry with Hercules and force him to humble himself. Catching this doe was no small matter, as she was timid and quick as the wind. Hercules pursued her for a whole year until he managed to get within shooting distance. Having wounded the doe, Hercules caught her and brought her to Mycenae. He asked Artemis for forgiveness for his act and brought her a rich sacrifice, which appeased the goddess.

Erymanthian boar

The next task was of the same kind: it was necessary to catch the Erymanthian boar, which was ravaging the outskirts of the city of Psofis and killing many people with its huge tusks. Hercules drove the boar into deep snow, tied it up and brought it to Mycenae alive. Eurystheus, out of fear of the monstrous beast, hid in a barrel and from there Hercules begged Hercules to get away with the boar as soon as possible - for this, he supposedly would entrust him with a less dangerous task: to clean out the stable of the Elisian king Augeas.

Augean stables

What is true is true, Hercules’ work was expected to be safe, but Augeas’s herds were huge, and so much manure and all kinds of dirt accumulated in the barn... it was not for nothing that this barn (or stable) became a proverb. Cleaning this barn was a superhuman task. Hercules offered the king to restore order in one day if he received a tenth of the royal cattle for this. Augeas agreed, and Hercules immediately got down to business, relying not so much on his strength as on his intelligence. He drove all the cattle out to pasture, dug a canal leading to the rivers Alpheus and Peneus, and diverted the water of these two rivers into it. The gushing water cleared the barn, after which all that remained was to block the channel and again drive the cattle into the stalls. However, King Augeas meanwhile learned that this work had previously been entrusted to Hercules by Eurystheus, and under this pretext Hercules refused to reward him. In addition, he insulted the hero, saying that it was not appropriate for the son of Zeus to earn extra money by cleaning other people's cowsheds. Hercules was not one of those who forget such grievances: a few years later, freed from service with Eurystheus, he invaded Elis with a large army, ravaged the possessions of Augeas, and killed him himself. In honor of this victory, Hercules founded the Olympic Games.

Cretan bull

The next assignment brought Hercules to Crete. Eurystheus ordered the delivery of a wild bull that had escaped from the Cretan king Minos to Mycenae. It was the best bull in the royal herd, and Minos promised to sacrifice it to Poseidon. But Minos did not want to part with such a magnificent specimen, and instead he sacrificed another bull. Poseidon did not allow himself to be tricked and, in retaliation, sent rabies onto the hidden bull. Hercules not only caught the bull that was ravaging the island, but also tamed it, and it obediently transported it on its back from Crete to Argolis.

Horses of Diomedes

Then Hercules sailed to Thrace (but already on a ship) to bring Eurystheus the fierce horses that the Biston king Diomedes fed with human meat. With the help of several of his friends, Hercules obtained horses and brought them to his ship. However, Diomedes and his army overtook him there. Leaving the horses in the care of his best friend Abdera, Hercules defeated the Bistons in a fierce battle and killed Diomedes, but in the meantime the wild horses tore Abdera to pieces. When the deeply saddened Hercules delivered the horses to Mycenae, Eurystheus released them - just as he had previously released the Cretan bull.

But neither sorrow nor neglect of the results of his labors broke Hercules. Without hesitation, he went to the island of Erithia to bring from there a herd of cattle that belonged to the three-body giant Geryon.

Giant Geryon

This island was located far to the west, where the land ended in a narrow isthmus. With his mighty club, Hercules divided the isthmus in half and placed two stone pillars along the edges of the resulting strait (in the ancient world, present-day Gibraltar was called nothing less than the Pillars of Hercules). He came to the western edge of the world just at the time when Helios was descending in his solar chariot to the Ocean. To escape from the unbearable heat, Hercules was ready to shoot an arrow at Helios. The reaction of the gods is unpredictable: admiring the courage of the hero who aimed his bow at him, Helios not only did not get angry, but even lent him his golden boat, on which Hercules sailed to Erythia. There he was attacked by the two-headed dog Orff and the giant Eurytion, who were guarding Geryon's herds. Hercules had no choice - he had to kill both, and then Geryon himself. Having endured many misadventures, Hercules drove the herd to the Peloponnese. On the way, he defeated the strongman Eryx, who stole one cow from him, and the giant Kaka, who stole part of his herd. When Hercules was already hoping that he would safely reach Mycenae, Hera instilled madness in the cows, and they ran away in all directions. Hercules had to work hard to round up the entire herd again. Eurystheus sacrificed cows to the eternal enemy of Hercules - Hera.

Belt of the Amazon Queen Hippolyta

Hercules' next feat was an expedition to the country of female warriors - the Amazons, from where he was supposed to bring Admethe, daughter of Eurystheus, the belt of the Amazon queen Hippolyta. Hercules went there with a small detachment consisting of his friends, and on the way stopped in Mysia, where King Lycus, known for his hospitality, reigned. During the feast arranged by Lik in their honor, warlike Bebriks invaded the city. Hercules got up from the table, together with his friends expelled the Bebriks, killed their king, and donated all their land to Lycus, who named it in honor of Hercules Heraclea. With his victory he gained such fame that Queen Hippolyta herself came out to meet him to voluntarily give him her belt. But then Hera began to spread rumors about Hercules that he intended to take Hippolyta into slavery, and the Amazons believed her. They attacked the Hercules detachment, and the Greeks had no choice but to take up arms. They eventually defeated the Amazons and captured many of them, including their two leaders, Melanippe and Antiope. Hippolyta returned Melanipa's freedom, giving Hercules his belt for this, and Hercules gave Antiope to his friend Theseus as a reward for his bravery. In addition, he knew that Theseus fell in love with Antiope and wanted to take her as his wife (this is what Theseus did upon returning to Athens).

Hellhound Kerber

So, Hercules performed ten labors, although Eurystheus at first refused to count the murder of the Lernaean Hydra (under the pretext that Hercules used the help of Iolaus) and the cleansing of the Augean stable (since Hercules demanded payment from Augeas). The eleventh assignment led Hercules to the underworld. Eurystheus demanded that Kerberus himself be presented to him - no more and no less. It was truly a hellish dog: three-headed, snakes writhing around its neck, and its tail ended in a dragon's head with a disgusting mouth. Although until then no one had returned from the afterlife alive, Hercules did not hesitate. The gods were impressed by his courage, and they decided to help him. Hermes, the guide of the souls of the dead, brought him to the Tenar gorge (at the present Cape Matapan, in the extreme south of the Peloponnese and the entire European continent), where there was a secret entrance to the kingdom of the dead, and then Athena accompanied him. After a terrible journey, on which he met the shadows of dead friends and killed enemies, Hercules appeared before the throne of the ruler of the underworld. Hades listened favorably to the son of Zeus and without any reason allowed him to catch and take away Kerberus, provided that he did not use weapons. True, Kerber himself has not yet said his word. The guardian of the underworld fought back with teeth and nails (or rather, claws), beat his tail with a dragon's head and howled so terribly that the souls of the dead rushed in confusion throughout the afterlife. After a short struggle, Hercules squeezed him with such force that the half-strangled Cerberus calmed down and promised to unquestioningly follow him to Mycenae. At the sight of this monster, Eurystheus fell to his knees (according to another version, he again hid in a barrel or in a large clay vessel for grain) and Hercules conjured to do mercy: return this hellish creature to its rightful place.

Golden apples of the Hesperides

The last task remained: Eurystheus ordered Hercules to tell him that he must bring him three golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides, daughters of the mighty titan Atlas, who, for his rebellion against the gods, was doomed to forever support the vault of heaven. Nobody knew where these gardens were. It was only known that the way to them was guarded by the ever-watchful dragon Ladon, the giant Antaeus, who did not know defeat in the fight and killed all those defeated, and finally Atlas himself. Hercules headed to Egypt, walked through Libya and all the lands familiar to him from the time of his trip to Erithia, but he never found the gardens of the Hesperides. Only when he came to the farthest north, to the endless waters of Eridanus, the nymphs there advised him to turn to the sea god Nereus - he knows and can tell everything, but he must be forced to do it. Hercules waylaid Nereus, attacked him and after a stubborn struggle (all the more difficult since the sea god kept changing his appearance) tied him up. He let him go only when he learned everything he needed to know. The Gardens of the Hesperides were located in the far west, somewhere between today's Morocco and southern France. Again Hercules had to go through Libya, where he was met by Antaeus, the son of the earth goddess Gaia. According to his custom, the giant immediately challenged Hercules to single combat. Hercules avoided defeat only because during the struggle he guessed where the giant got his strength from: feeling tired, he fell to mother earth, and she poured new strength into him. Therefore, Hercules tore him off the ground and lifted him into the air. Antaeus became weak, and Hercules strangled him. Continuing his journey, Hercules again and again overcame the obstacles and traps that robbers and rulers prepared for travelers. He also escaped the fate that the Egyptian king Busiris intended for all foreigners, who sacrificed them to the gods. Finally, Hercules came to Atlas and explained to him the purpose of his coming. With suspicious readiness, Atlas volunteered to personally bring apples to Hercules if in the meantime he would hold the vault of heaven on his shoulders. Hercules had no choice - he agreed. Atlas kept his promise and even offered to deliver the apples directly to Mycenae, promising to return immediately. Cunning can only be overcome by cunning: Hercules apparently agreed, but asked Atlas to hold the vault of heaven while he made himself a backing so that the pressure on his shoulders would not be felt. As soon as Atlas took his usual place, Hercules took the apples, kindly thanked for the service - and stopped only in Mycenae. Eurystheus could not believe his eyes and, in confusion, returned the apples to Hercules. He donated them to Athena, and she returned them to the Hesperides. The twelfth task was completed, and Hercules received freedom.

The life of Hercules after completing the twelve labors

Soon Hercules became free in another sense: he generously gave up his wife Megara to Iolaus, who in his absence, like a faithful friend, consoled her and became so accustomed to her that he could no longer live without her. After which Hercules left Thebes, with which nothing now connected him, and returned to Tiryns. But not for long. There, new machinations of the goddess Hera awaited him, and with them new sufferings and new exploits.

It is not known exactly whether Hera instilled in him a desire for a new wife or aroused in him an ambitious desire to defeat the best archer in Hellas, the Echalian king Eurytus. However, both were closely interconnected, since Eurytus proclaimed that he would give his daughter, the fair-haired beauty Iola, as a wife only to the one who defeats him in archery. So, Hercules went to Echalia (most likely it was in Messenia, according to Sophocles - on Euboea), appeared at the palace of his former teacher, fell in love with his daughter at first sight, and the next day defeated him in a competition. But Eurytus, stung by the fact that he was disgraced by his own student, declared that he would not give his daughter to the one who was a slave to the cowardly Eurystheus. Hercules was offended and went to look for a new wife. He found her in distant Calydon: she was the beautiful Deianira, daughter of King Oeneus.

He did not get her easily: to do this, Hercules had to defeat her former fiancé, the mighty river god Achelous, who could also turn into a snake and a bull, in single combat. After the wedding, the newlyweds remained in the palace of Oeneus, but Hera did not leave Hercules alone. She darkened his mind, and at a feast he killed the son of his friend Architelos. Actually, Hercules just wanted to slap him on the head for pouring water intended for washing his feet on his hands. But Hercules did not calculate his strength, and the boy fell dead. True, Architelos forgave him, but Hercules did not want to stay in Calydon and went with Deianira to Tiryns.

During the journey they came to the Evenu River. There was no bridge across it, and those wishing to cross were transported for a reasonable fee by the centaur Nessus. Hercules entrusted Dejanira with Nessus, and he himself swam across the river. Meanwhile, the centaur, captivated by Deianira's beauty, tried to kidnap her. But he was overtaken by the deadly arrow of Hercules. The bile of the Lernaean Hydra poisoned the blood of the centaur, and he soon died. And yet, before his death, he managed to take revenge: Nessus advised Deianira to save his blood and rub Hercules’ clothes with it if he suddenly stopped loving Deianira, and then Hercules’ love would immediately return to her. In Tiryns, it seemed to Dejanira that she would never need “love blood.” The couple lived in peace and harmony, raising their five children - until Hera again intervened in the fate of Hercules.

By a strange coincidence, simultaneously with the departure of Hercules from Ehalia, King Eurytus’ herd of cattle disappeared. Autolycus stole it. But this cunning thief, in order to divert suspicions, pointed to Hercules, who supposedly wanted to take revenge on the king for the insult. All of Ehalia believed this slander - with the exception of Eurytus's eldest son, Iphitus. To prove the innocence of Hercules, he himself went in search of the herd, which led him to Argos; and since he got there, he decided to look into Tiryns. Hercules warmly welcomed him, but when during the feast he heard what Eurytus suspected him of, he became angry, and Hera instilled in him such uncontrollable anger that he threw Iphitus from the city wall. This was no longer just murder, but a violation of the sacred law of hospitality. Even Zeus was angry with his son and sent him a serious illness.

The anguished Hercules, straining his last strength, went to Delphi to ask Apollo how he could atone for his guilt. But the Pythia soothsayer did not give him an answer. Then Hercules, losing his temper, took away from her the tripod from which she proclaimed her prophecies - they say, since she does not fulfill her duties, then the tripod is of no use to her. Apollo immediately appeared and demanded the return of the tripod. Hercules refused, Apollo grabbed hold of Hercules, and the two mighty sons of Zeus started a fight like little children, until their thunder father separated them with lightning and forced them to make peace. Apollo ordered the Pythia to give advice to Hercules, and she announced that Hercules should be sold into slavery for three years, and the proceeds should be given to Euryta as a ransom for her murdered son.

Thus, Hercules again had to part with freedom. He was sold to the Lydian queen Omphale, an arrogant and cruel woman who humiliated him in every possible way. She even forced him to weave with her maids, while she herself walked in front of him in his skin of the lion of Cythaeron. From time to time she let him go for a while - not out of kindness, but so that upon his return he would be all the more burdened by the slave's lot.

During one of these vacations, Hercules took part in the campaign of the Argonauts, another time he visited the Aulidian king Sileus, who forced every foreigner to work in his vineyard. One day, when he fell asleep in a grove near Ephesus, the dwarfs Kerkops (or Dactyls) attacked him and stole his weapons. At first, Hercules wanted to thoroughly teach them a lesson, but they were so weak and funny that he set them free. Hercules himself invariably returned to his slave service.

Finally the last day of the third year arrived, and Hercules received his weapons and freedom from Omphale. The hero parted with her without anger and even granted her request to leave her a descendant as a souvenir (Attis, born of Hercules, subsequently ascended to the Lydian throne). Returning to his homeland, Hercules gathered his faithful friends and began to prepare to pay off old scores. King Augeas was the first to pay for the long-standing insult, then it was the turn of the Trojan king Laomedon (about this, see the articles “Laomedon” and “Thesion”).

After all these deeds, is it any wonder that the glory of Hercules reached the snowy peaks of Olympus? But this was not all that he did. For example, he freed the titan Prometheus, snatched Alcestis from the hands of the god of death Thanatos, defeated many enemies, robbers and proud people, for example, Cycnus, the son of Ares (and you can read about this in the relevant articles). Hercules founded a number of cities, the most famous of them being Heraclea (Herculaneum) near Vesuvius. He made many wives happy with offspring (for example, after the first night spent by the Argonauts on Lemnos, at least fifty Lemnian women called him the father of their sons). Ancient authors had doubts about some of his other achievements and deeds, so we will not dwell on them. However, all the authors unanimously admit that he had an honor that no other mortal had been granted - Zeus himself asked him for help!

This happened during the Gigantomachy - the battle of the gods with the giants. In this battle on the Phlegrean fields, the Olympian gods had a hard time, since the giants had incredible strength, and their mother, the earth goddess Gaia, gave them a magic herb that made them invulnerable to the weapons of the gods (but not mortals). When the scales were already tipping towards the giants, Zeus sent Athena for Hercules. Hercules did not need much persuasion; Hearing his father's call, he eagerly hurried to the battlefield. The most powerful of the giants, Alcyoneus, was crushed first, and then, with exemplary interaction with the Olympian team of gods, all the other rebels were killed. By this, Hercules gained the gratitude of not only the gods, but also people. For all his shortcomings, Zeus was still much better than his predecessors Kronos and Uranus, not to mention the primordial Chaos.

Upon returning from the Phlegrean fields, Hercules decided to repay the last of his old debts. He went on a campaign against Ehalia, conquered it and killed Eurytus, who had once insulted him. Among the captives, Hercules saw fair-haired Iola and was again inflamed with love for her. Having learned about this, Dejanira immediately remembered the dying words of Nessus, rubbed the tunic of Hercules with his blood and, through the ambassador Lichas, handed the tunic to Hercules, who was still in Ehalia. As soon as Hercules put on the tunic, the poison of the Lernaean Hydra, which poisoned the blood of Nessus, penetrated the body of Hercules, causing him unbearable torment. When he was brought on a stretcher to the palace to Dejanira, she was already dead - having learned that her husband was dying in agony through her fault, she pierced herself with a sword.

Unbearable suffering led Hercules to the idea of ​​giving up his life of his own free will. Obeying Hercules, his friends built a huge fire on Mount Ete and laid the hero on it, but no one wanted to set the fire on fire, no matter how Hercules begged them. Finally, young Philoctetes made up his mind, and as a reward, Hercules gave him his bow and arrows. A fire flared up from the torch of Philoctetes, but the lightning of Zeus the Thunderer shone even brighter. Together with lightning, Athena and Hermes flew to the fire and carried Hercules to heaven in a golden chariot. All of Olympus welcomed the greatest of heroes, even Hera overcame her old hatred and gave him her daughter, the eternally young Hebe, as his wife. Zeus called him to the table of the gods, invited him to taste nectar and ambrosia, and as a reward for all his exploits and sufferings, declared Hercules immortal.

Heracles (Hercules) in world culture

Zeus' decision remains in force to this day: Hercules truly became immortal. He lives on in legends and sayings, he is still the model of a hero (and as a true hero, he inevitably has negative traits), the Olympic Games are still held, which he is said to have founded in memory of his victory over Augeas or on his return Argonauts from Colchis. And he still lives in the heavens: on a starry night, the constellation Hercules can be seen with the naked eye. The Greeks and Romans revered him as the greatest of heroes and dedicated cities, temples and altars to him. The creations of ancient and modern artists glorify him. Hercules is the most frequently depicted image of ancient myths and any legends in general.

It is almost impossible to count all the ancient images of Hercules. According to Bromer's catalog, there are more than 1,800 of them in the vase paintings alone. Five of these vases are kept in Prague: at Charles University, at the National Museum, at the Museum of Applied Arts and in one of the private collections.

The oldest known sculptural image of Hercules - “Hercules fighting the Hydra” (c. 570 BC) - is kept in Athens, in the Acropolis Museum. Among the other numerous works of Greek sculpture, metopes from the temple “C” in Selinunte (c. 540 BC) and 12 metopes depicting the labors of Hercules from the temple of Zeus in Olympia (470-456 BC) are known. Of the Roman sculptures, the most preserved copies are “Hercules” by Polykleitos and “Hercules fighting the lion” by Lysippos (one of them is in St. Petersburg, in the Hermitage). Several wall images of Hercules were preserved even in the Christian catacombs of Rome (mid-4th century AD).

Of the architectural structures traditionally associated with the name of Hercules, the most ancient Greek temple in Sicily, in Akragante (6th century BC), is usually named in first place. In Rome, two temples were dedicated to Hercules, one under the Capitol, the second behind the Circus Maximus near the Tiber. Altars of Hercules stood in almost every Greek and Roman city.

Scenes from the life of Hercules were depicted by numerous European artists: Rubens, Poussin (“Landscape with Hercules and Cacus” - in Moscow, in the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts), Reni, Van Dyck, Delacroix and many others. There are a huge number of statues of Hercules by European sculptors; several of the best works migrated to Sweden and Austria from Czechoslovakia as a result of the Thirty Years' War and dynastic divisions.

In literature, the oldest mentions of the exploits of Hercules (but not all) are contained in Homer; Subsequently, almost none of the ancient authors ignored Hercules. Sophocles dedicated the tragedy of “The Trachinian Woman” to the last period of Hercules’ life. Perhaps a little later, Euripides created the tragedy “Hercules” based on an unconventional version of the myth (which actually has many variants) - it still remains the best literary monument to Hercules. Among the works of modern times, we will name “The Choice of Hercules” by K. M. Wieland (1773), “Hercules and the Augean Stables” by Dürrenmatt (1954), “Hercules” by Matkovich (1962).

And finally, about the fate of Hercules in music. He was honored with their attention by J. S. Bach (cantata “Hercules at the Crossroads”, 1733), G. F. Handel (oratorio “Hercules”, 1745, which was later revised by him), C. Saint-Saens (symphonic poems “The Youth of Hercules” ", "The Spinning Wheel of Omphale", the opera "Dejanira").

Heracles (Hercules) is a synonym for a strongman: “What a giant he is presented here!/What shoulders! What a Hercules!..” - A. S. Pushkin, “The Stone Guest” (1830).

In the photo: stills from the film “Hercules in New York” (1969), the first live-action film in which Arnold Schwarzenegger starred.