The Greatest Hero of Them All 
We will examine Heracles, the greatest of all 
Greek heroes. We begin by looking at the 
stories of his birth and childhood, which like 
those of Theseus, exhibit many conventional 
elements. 
We discuss Hera’s special hatred for Heracles, 
which began even before his birth. 
We will also consider Heracles’s tendency 
toward excess and examine how this led to the 
necessity of his famous Twelve Labors. 
After discussing the Labors, we will look at 
Heracles’s death and subsequent immortality. 
Finally we conclude by looking at the many 
contradictory characteristics of this most 
famous hero and discussing some of their 
implications.
The greatest and most famous Greek her of all is Heracles 
(Latin Hercules), son of Zeus and the mortal woman 
Alcmene. Unlike many heroes who are associated with only 
one city, Heracles was pan-Hellenic hero, claimed by all of 
Greece. 
• Heracles is mentioned in epic, 
tragedy, history, and most other 
genres of Greek and Roman 
literature, but none of them tells 
his complete story. 
• Fortunately for us, Apollodorus 
gives an account of Heracles’s 
life, as he does for Theseus, which 
allows us to understand the more 
illusive references to him in other 
authors.
Like those of many other heroes, Heracles’s 
conception and babyhood were unusual. 
• Heracles is the son of Zeus and 
Alcmene, wife of Amphitryon. 
• Zeus tricked Alcmene into sleeping with 
him by disguising himself as Amphitryon, 
who was actually away at war. 
• Amphitryon returned the next day, much 
to Alcmene’s surprise. 
• Alcmene conceived Heracles by Zeus 
and his twin, Iphicles, by Amphitryon. 
• This story clearly recalls Theseus’s dual 
parentage by Aigeus and Poseidon.
Hera always hated Zeus’s sons by other females, and 
she particularly detested Heracles. 
• Her hatred reflects the fact that 
Heracles was destined to be the greatest 
of all heroes. 
• She sabotaged him from the day of his 
birth. Zeus declared that a descendant of 
Perseus who was about to be born 
would rule over Mycenae; knowing that 
Zeus meant Heracles, Hera persuaded 
the goddess of childbirth to extend 
Alcmene’s labor and to hasten the birth 
of a cousin of Heracles, Eurystheus. 
• Heracles’s name apparently means 
“glorious through Hera.” 
• Even as a baby, Heracles showed strength 
and courage. When Hera sent snakes to 
kill him in his cradle, the baby Heracles 
strangled them.
• When Heracles reached maturity, he was characterized not only by extreme strength and 
courage, but also by other extremes; of sexual appetite, of hunger and thirst, and of rage. 
• Among the first of Heracles’s adventures was his encounter with the fifty daughters of 
Thespios, when he was only eighteen. He slept with all fifty of them. 
• His appetite for food and drink was no less voracious. He was given to excessive rage, 
even madness (perhaps sent by Hera)
• In one such episode of madness, he killed his own children by his 
first wife, Megara. 
• This act lead directly to his famous labors. on the advice of the 
Pythia, he served Eurystheus for twelve years and performed the 
labors that Eurystheus ordered. 
• The Pythia promised that the reward for accomplishing the labors 
would be immortality.
• Heracles’s Twelve Labors are examples of the “test-and-quest” 
type of hero tale. The labors involve an ascending 
degree of difficulty and of distance that Heracles must 
travel, and each of the labors have been impossible or fatal 
for a lesser man.
• The first six labors all take place in the Peloponnesus 
and involve animals. With the exception of the Hydra, 
these animals are not imaginary monsters, but each of 
them has some extraordinary attribute that makes it 
exceptionally dangerous. 
• The Nemean Lion. Heracles killed and skinned it. 
• The Lernaean Hydra. This was a snake with nine 
heads, one of which was immortal. When a head was 
cut off, two grew in its place. Heracles finally 
vanquished it with the help of his nephew Iolaus. 
• The Cerynian Hind. This golden-horned deer was 
not dangerous in itself but was sacred to Artemis. 
Heracles captured it.
• The Erymanthian Boar. Eurystheus demanded that Heracles capture this 
savage beast and bring it to him alive. 
• The Augean Stables. This labor differs from the rest in that it was difficult but 
not particularly dangerous. The stables had never been cleaned; Heracles diverted 
two rivers to flow through them. 
• The Stymphalian Birds. These birds, which lived in a swamp, could shoot their 
arrow-sharp feathers from their wings. Heracles killed them all.
• The next three labors take place 
outside of the Peloponnese, moving 
steadily further away and becoming 
steadily stranger. 
• The Cretan Bull. This may be 
the same bull that sired the 
Minotaur; Heracles caught it and 
brought it to Eurystheus. 
• The Mares of Diomedes. 
Heracles tames these man-eating 
mares and fed their master, 
Diomedes, to them. 
• The Belt of Hippolyta. 
Hippolyta was an Amazon Queen, 
and Heracles had to take her belt 
away from her.
• The final three labors take Heracles to the very edges of the world and pit him against 
emblems of mortality and immortality. (The order of the last two labors is sometimes 
reversed) 
• The Cattle of Geryon. Geryon was a triple-bodied monster who lived in the far west. Heracles 
drove his cattle back to Eurystheus.
• The Apples of the Hesperides. These daughters of Night had a tree with golden 
apples, also in the far west, guarded by a dragon. With Atlas’s help, Heracles got the 
apples. 
• Cerberus. Heracles descended to Tartaros to fetch back this guard dog of the 
Underworld. Eurystheus didn't know what to do with him, and Cerberus found his way 
back to Hades.
• Heracles has various other adventures beyond the labors, in what are 
sometimes called the parerga, or “side works.” 
• Heracles is unlike most other heroes in that he is neither a king nor primarily 
a warrior. 
• It is clear from his labors and parerga that his primary role is as a fighter of 
animals, particularly extraordinary or dangerous animals, and monsters.
• One interpretation of this role is that it represents the spread of Greek 
culture; Heracles takes Greek civilization with him wherever he goes. 
• He travels widely in his labors. 
• The killing of monsters can be read as representing the “humanizing” of 
unknown lands.
• Heracles is one of very few humans in Greek myth to become a god. His road to 
immortality was caused not by exceptional goodness, but by exceptional wrongdoing and 
suffering. 
• Heracles’s second wife was Deianira. His marriage to her was beset with difficulties that 
included two encounters with semi-animal beings. 
• Before he could marry Deianira, Heracles had to wrestle the river god Achelous, who had 
the head of a bull.
• As Heracles was returning home with Deianira, the centaur Nessos tried to 
rape her. Heracles shot him with an arrow that had been dipped in the Hydra’s 
venom. 
• As Nessos was dying, he told Deianira to gather some of his blood as a love-charm.
• Years later, when Heracles fell in love with another woman, Deianira gave him a robe dipped 
in Nessos’s blood. 
• The robe burned Heracles’s flesh but did not kill him. 
• In agony, he mounted a funeral pyre and burned himself to death. 
• Only his body died, however, he became immortal and took his place on Olympus, where he 
married Hebe. 
• This reiterates the idea, seen in the stories of Demophoon and Dionysos, that passing 
through fire is a necessary step for immortality.
• So many stories cluster around Heracles that it is very difficult to construct a unified, coherent picture. He 
can best be analyzed by identifying a series of polar oppositions that seem to underlie his myth. 
• He is both admirable and horrifying, powerful and powerless. 
• The hero who overcomes monsters and marks out the civilized world is also the madman who kills his wife 
and children. 
• The greatest of Zeus’s human sons is twice a slave. 
• His is supremely ill-fated and supremely fortunate. 
• He is persecuted by Hera from before his birth, and he dies shamefully, in agony. 
• This all-to-human hero is also the one human to achieve immortality and become a god; yet he continued 
to receive sacrifices as both a hero and a god. 
• His persecutor, Hera, allows him to marry her own daughter, Hebe.
• He both resists Death and intentionally embraces it. 
• His last three labors are all in some sense conquests of Death. 
• In another story, he wrestled with and defeated Death himself. 
• Yet his own death comes through voluntary self-cremation. 
• He is both a serious, even tragic, figure and a comic figure of excess. 
• He is both masculine and feminine; in one of his parerga, the ultra-masculine strongman 
wears women’s clothes and is the slave of a queen. 
• Syncretism may account for some of these differences but seem inadequate to explain 
them all. Theoretical interpretations may be more satisfactory, for example: 
• Heracles can be read as a kind of “everyman” figure who largely displays a Jungian shadow 
side. 
• He can also be seen as embodying (and thus mediating between) both Nature and 
Culture.

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Heracles

  • 1. The Greatest Hero of Them All We will examine Heracles, the greatest of all Greek heroes. We begin by looking at the stories of his birth and childhood, which like those of Theseus, exhibit many conventional elements. We discuss Hera’s special hatred for Heracles, which began even before his birth. We will also consider Heracles’s tendency toward excess and examine how this led to the necessity of his famous Twelve Labors. After discussing the Labors, we will look at Heracles’s death and subsequent immortality. Finally we conclude by looking at the many contradictory characteristics of this most famous hero and discussing some of their implications.
  • 2. The greatest and most famous Greek her of all is Heracles (Latin Hercules), son of Zeus and the mortal woman Alcmene. Unlike many heroes who are associated with only one city, Heracles was pan-Hellenic hero, claimed by all of Greece. • Heracles is mentioned in epic, tragedy, history, and most other genres of Greek and Roman literature, but none of them tells his complete story. • Fortunately for us, Apollodorus gives an account of Heracles’s life, as he does for Theseus, which allows us to understand the more illusive references to him in other authors.
  • 3. Like those of many other heroes, Heracles’s conception and babyhood were unusual. • Heracles is the son of Zeus and Alcmene, wife of Amphitryon. • Zeus tricked Alcmene into sleeping with him by disguising himself as Amphitryon, who was actually away at war. • Amphitryon returned the next day, much to Alcmene’s surprise. • Alcmene conceived Heracles by Zeus and his twin, Iphicles, by Amphitryon. • This story clearly recalls Theseus’s dual parentage by Aigeus and Poseidon.
  • 4. Hera always hated Zeus’s sons by other females, and she particularly detested Heracles. • Her hatred reflects the fact that Heracles was destined to be the greatest of all heroes. • She sabotaged him from the day of his birth. Zeus declared that a descendant of Perseus who was about to be born would rule over Mycenae; knowing that Zeus meant Heracles, Hera persuaded the goddess of childbirth to extend Alcmene’s labor and to hasten the birth of a cousin of Heracles, Eurystheus. • Heracles’s name apparently means “glorious through Hera.” • Even as a baby, Heracles showed strength and courage. When Hera sent snakes to kill him in his cradle, the baby Heracles strangled them.
  • 5. • When Heracles reached maturity, he was characterized not only by extreme strength and courage, but also by other extremes; of sexual appetite, of hunger and thirst, and of rage. • Among the first of Heracles’s adventures was his encounter with the fifty daughters of Thespios, when he was only eighteen. He slept with all fifty of them. • His appetite for food and drink was no less voracious. He was given to excessive rage, even madness (perhaps sent by Hera)
  • 6. • In one such episode of madness, he killed his own children by his first wife, Megara. • This act lead directly to his famous labors. on the advice of the Pythia, he served Eurystheus for twelve years and performed the labors that Eurystheus ordered. • The Pythia promised that the reward for accomplishing the labors would be immortality.
  • 7. • Heracles’s Twelve Labors are examples of the “test-and-quest” type of hero tale. The labors involve an ascending degree of difficulty and of distance that Heracles must travel, and each of the labors have been impossible or fatal for a lesser man.
  • 8. • The first six labors all take place in the Peloponnesus and involve animals. With the exception of the Hydra, these animals are not imaginary monsters, but each of them has some extraordinary attribute that makes it exceptionally dangerous. • The Nemean Lion. Heracles killed and skinned it. • The Lernaean Hydra. This was a snake with nine heads, one of which was immortal. When a head was cut off, two grew in its place. Heracles finally vanquished it with the help of his nephew Iolaus. • The Cerynian Hind. This golden-horned deer was not dangerous in itself but was sacred to Artemis. Heracles captured it.
  • 9. • The Erymanthian Boar. Eurystheus demanded that Heracles capture this savage beast and bring it to him alive. • The Augean Stables. This labor differs from the rest in that it was difficult but not particularly dangerous. The stables had never been cleaned; Heracles diverted two rivers to flow through them. • The Stymphalian Birds. These birds, which lived in a swamp, could shoot their arrow-sharp feathers from their wings. Heracles killed them all.
  • 10. • The next three labors take place outside of the Peloponnese, moving steadily further away and becoming steadily stranger. • The Cretan Bull. This may be the same bull that sired the Minotaur; Heracles caught it and brought it to Eurystheus. • The Mares of Diomedes. Heracles tames these man-eating mares and fed their master, Diomedes, to them. • The Belt of Hippolyta. Hippolyta was an Amazon Queen, and Heracles had to take her belt away from her.
  • 11. • The final three labors take Heracles to the very edges of the world and pit him against emblems of mortality and immortality. (The order of the last two labors is sometimes reversed) • The Cattle of Geryon. Geryon was a triple-bodied monster who lived in the far west. Heracles drove his cattle back to Eurystheus.
  • 12. • The Apples of the Hesperides. These daughters of Night had a tree with golden apples, also in the far west, guarded by a dragon. With Atlas’s help, Heracles got the apples. • Cerberus. Heracles descended to Tartaros to fetch back this guard dog of the Underworld. Eurystheus didn't know what to do with him, and Cerberus found his way back to Hades.
  • 13. • Heracles has various other adventures beyond the labors, in what are sometimes called the parerga, or “side works.” • Heracles is unlike most other heroes in that he is neither a king nor primarily a warrior. • It is clear from his labors and parerga that his primary role is as a fighter of animals, particularly extraordinary or dangerous animals, and monsters.
  • 14. • One interpretation of this role is that it represents the spread of Greek culture; Heracles takes Greek civilization with him wherever he goes. • He travels widely in his labors. • The killing of monsters can be read as representing the “humanizing” of unknown lands.
  • 15. • Heracles is one of very few humans in Greek myth to become a god. His road to immortality was caused not by exceptional goodness, but by exceptional wrongdoing and suffering. • Heracles’s second wife was Deianira. His marriage to her was beset with difficulties that included two encounters with semi-animal beings. • Before he could marry Deianira, Heracles had to wrestle the river god Achelous, who had the head of a bull.
  • 16. • As Heracles was returning home with Deianira, the centaur Nessos tried to rape her. Heracles shot him with an arrow that had been dipped in the Hydra’s venom. • As Nessos was dying, he told Deianira to gather some of his blood as a love-charm.
  • 17. • Years later, when Heracles fell in love with another woman, Deianira gave him a robe dipped in Nessos’s blood. • The robe burned Heracles’s flesh but did not kill him. • In agony, he mounted a funeral pyre and burned himself to death. • Only his body died, however, he became immortal and took his place on Olympus, where he married Hebe. • This reiterates the idea, seen in the stories of Demophoon and Dionysos, that passing through fire is a necessary step for immortality.
  • 18. • So many stories cluster around Heracles that it is very difficult to construct a unified, coherent picture. He can best be analyzed by identifying a series of polar oppositions that seem to underlie his myth. • He is both admirable and horrifying, powerful and powerless. • The hero who overcomes monsters and marks out the civilized world is also the madman who kills his wife and children. • The greatest of Zeus’s human sons is twice a slave. • His is supremely ill-fated and supremely fortunate. • He is persecuted by Hera from before his birth, and he dies shamefully, in agony. • This all-to-human hero is also the one human to achieve immortality and become a god; yet he continued to receive sacrifices as both a hero and a god. • His persecutor, Hera, allows him to marry her own daughter, Hebe.
  • 19. • He both resists Death and intentionally embraces it. • His last three labors are all in some sense conquests of Death. • In another story, he wrestled with and defeated Death himself. • Yet his own death comes through voluntary self-cremation. • He is both a serious, even tragic, figure and a comic figure of excess. • He is both masculine and feminine; in one of his parerga, the ultra-masculine strongman wears women’s clothes and is the slave of a queen. • Syncretism may account for some of these differences but seem inadequate to explain them all. Theoretical interpretations may be more satisfactory, for example: • Heracles can be read as a kind of “everyman” figure who largely displays a Jungian shadow side. • He can also be seen as embodying (and thus mediating between) both Nature and Culture.