Heroes of Greek mythology. Myths of ancient Greece about heroes

28.04.2019

Ancient Greece is one of the richest sources of myths about gods, ordinary people and
the mortal heroes who protected them. Over the centuries, these stories have been created
poets, historians and simply "witnesses" of the legendary deeds of fearless heroes,
having the powers of demigods.

1

Hercules, the son of Zeus and a mortal woman, was famous for special honor among the heroes.
Alcmene. The most famous myth of all can be considered a cycle of 12 exploits,
which the son of Zeus performed alone, being in the service of King Eurystheus. Even
in the celestial constellation you can see the constellation Hercules.

2


Achilles is one of the bravest Greek heroes who undertook a campaign against
Troy led by Agamemnon. Stories about him are always full of courage and
courage. No wonder he is one of the key figures in the writings of the Iliad, where he
given more honor than any other warrior.

3


He was described not only as an intelligent and brave king, but also as
great speaker. He was the main key figure in the story "The Odyssey".
His adventures and return to his wife Penelope found an echo in the hearts
many people.

4


Perseus was no less a key figure in ancient Greek mythology. He
is described as the winner of the monster Gorgon Medusa, and the savior of the beautiful
princess Andromeda.

5


Theseus can be called the most famous character in all of Greek mythology. He
most often appears not only in the Iliad, but also in the Odyssey.

6


Jason is the leader of the Argonauts who went to search for the golden fleece in Colchis.
This task was given to him by his father's brother Pelius in order to destroy him, but it
brought him eternal glory.

7


Hector in ancient Greek mythology appears before us not only as a prince
Troy, but also the great commander who died at the hands of Achilles. He is placed on a par with
many heroes of that time.

8


Ergin is the son of Poseidon, and one of the Argonauts who set off for the Golden Fleece.

9


Talai is another of the Argonauts. Honest, fair, smart and reliable -
as described by Homer in his Odyssey.

10


Orpheus was not so much a hero as a singer and musician. However, his
the image can be "meet" in many paintings of that time.

(or their descendants) and mortal people. Heroes differed from gods in that they were mortal. More often they were the descendants of a god and a mortal woman, less often - a goddess and a mortal man. Heroes, as a rule, possessed exceptional or supernatural physical abilities, creative talents, etc., but did not possess immortality. The heroes were supposed to fulfill the will of the gods on earth, to bring order and justice into people's lives. With the help of their divine parents, they performed all sorts of feats. Heroes were highly revered, legends about them were passed down from generation to generation.
The heroes of ancient Greek myths were Achilles, Hercules, Odysseus, Perseus, Theseus, Jason, Hector, Bellerophon, Orpheus, Pelops, Phoroneus, Aeneas.
Let's talk about some of them.

Achilles

Achilles was the bravest of heroes. He participated in the campaign against Troy led by the Mycenaean king Agamemnon.

Achilles. Greek antique bas-relief
Author: Jastrow (2007), from Wikipedia
Achilles was the son of the mortal Peleus, king of the Myrmidons, and the sea goddess Thetis.
There are several legends about the childhood of Achilles. One of them is the following: Thetis, wanting to make her son immortal, immersed him in the waters of Styx (according to another version, in fire), so that only the heel by which she held him remained vulnerable; hence the proverb "Achilles' heel" that exists to this day. This saying denotes someone's weak side.
As a child, Achilles was called Pyrrisius ("Ice"), but when the fire burned his lips, he was called Achilles ("lipless").
Achilles was raised by the centaur Chiron.

Chiron teaching Achilles to play the lyre
Another teacher of Achilles was Phoenix, a friend of his father Peleus. The centaur Chiron returned Phoenix's sight, which was taken from him by his father, who was falsely accused by a concubine.
Achilles joined the campaign against Troy at the head of 50 or even 60 ships, taking with him his tutor Phoenix and childhood friend Patroclus.

Achilles bandaging the hand of Patroclus (picture on the bowl)
The first shield of Achilles was made by Hephaestus, this scene is also depicted on vases.
During the long siege of Ilion, Achilles repeatedly launched raids on various neighboring cities. According to the existing version, he wandered the Scythian land for five years in search of Iphigenia.
Achilles is the main character in Homer's Iliad.
Having slain many enemies, Achilles in the last battle reached the Skeian gates of Ilion, but here an arrow shot from the bow of Paris by the hand of Apollo himself hit him in the heel, and the hero died.

Death of Achilles
But there are later legends about the death of Achilles: he appeared in the temple of Apollo in Fimbra, near Troy, to marry Polyxena, the youngest daughter of Priam, where he was killed by Paris and Deiphobes.
Greek writer of the first half of the 2nd century AD. e. Ptolemy Hephaestion tells that Achilles was killed by Helen or Penthesilea, after which Thetis resurrected him, he killed Penthesilea and returned to Hades (the god of the underworld of the dead).
The Greeks erected a mausoleum for Achilles on the banks of the Hellespont, and here, in order to pacify the shadow of the hero, they sacrificed Polyxena to him. For the armor of Achilles, according to the story of Homer, Ajax Telamonides and Odysseus Laertides argued. Agamemnon awarded them to the latter. In the Odyssey, Achilles is in the underworld, where Odysseus meets him.
Achilles was buried in a golden amphora, which Dionysus presented to Thetis.

Hercules

A. Canova "Hercules"
Author: Lucius Commons - foto scattata da me., from Wikipedia
Hercules is the son of the god Zeus and Alkmena, the daughter of the Mycenaean king.
Numerous myths have been created about Hercules, the most famous is the cycle of legends about 12 exploits performed by Hercules when he was in the service of the Mycenaean king Eurystheus.
The cult of Hercules was very popular in Greece, from where it spread to Italy, where he is known by the name of Hercules.
The constellation Hercules is located in the northern hemisphere of the sky.
Zeus took the form of Amphitryon (husband of Alcmene), stopped the sun, and their night lasted three days. On the night when he was to be born, Hera made Zeus swear that today's newborn would be the supreme king. Hercules was from the Perseid family, but Hera delayed the birth of his mother, and his cousin Eurystheus was the first to be born (premature). Zeus concluded an agreement with Hera that Hercules would not be under the rule of Eurystheus all his life: after ten labors performed on behalf of Eurystheus, Hercules would not only be freed from his power, but even receive immortality.
Athena tricks Hera into breastfeeding Hercules: having tasted this milk, Hercules becomes immortal. The baby hurts the goddess, and she tears him off her chest; the splashed stream of milk turns into the Milky Way. Hera was the adoptive mother of Hercules.
In his youth, Hercules accidentally killed Lin, brother of Orpheus, with a lyre, so he was forced to retire to the wooded Kiteron, into exile. There, two nymphs appear to him (Depravity and Virtue), who offer him a choice between the easy road of pleasures and the thorny path of labors and exploits. Virtue convinced Hercules to go his own way.

Annibale Carracci "The Choice of Hercules"

12 Labors of Hercules

1 Strangling the Nemean Lion
2. Killing the Lernaean Hydra
3. Extermination of Stymphalian birds
4. Capture of the Kerinean fallow deer
5. Taming the Erymanthian boar and the battle with the centaurs
6. Cleaning the Augean stables.
7. Taming the Cretan Bull
8. Stealing the horses of Diomedes, defeating King Diomedes (who threw foreigners to be eaten by his horses)
9 The Abduction Of The Girdle Of Hippolyta, Queen Of The Amazons
10. The abduction of the cows of the three-headed giant Gerion
11. Theft of golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides
12. Taming the guardian of Hades - the dog Cerberus

Antoine Bourdelle "Hercules and the Stymphalian Birds"
Stymphalian birds are birds of prey that lived near the Arcadian city of Stymphalus. They had copper beaks, wings and claws. They attacked people and animals. Their most formidable weapons were feathers, which birds poured on the ground like arrows. They devoured crops in the area or ate people.
Hercules performed many other feats: with the consent of Zeus, he freed one of the titans - Prometheus, to whom the centaur Chiron gave his gift of immortality for the sake of liberation from torment.

G. Fuger "Prometheus brings fire to people"
During his tenth labor, he places the Pillars of Hercules on the sides of Gibraltar.

The Pillars of Hercules - The Rock of Gibraltar (foreground) and the mountains of North Africa (background)
Author: Hansvandervliet - Own work, from Wikipedia
Participated in the campaign of the Argonauts. Defeated the king of Elis Avgii and established the Olympic Games. At the Olympic Games, he won the pankration. Some authors describe the struggle of Hercules with Zeus himself - their contest ended in a draw. He established the Olympic stages 600 feet long. In running, he overcame stages without taking a breath. Accomplished many other feats.
There are also many legends about the death of Hercules. According to Ptolemy Hephaestion, having reached the age of 50 and finding that he could no longer draw his bow, he threw himself into the fire. Hercules ascended to heaven, was accepted among the gods, and Hera, reconciled with him, marries her daughter Hebe, the goddess of eternal youth, to him. Happily lives on Olympus, and his ghost is in Hades.

Hector

The bravest leader of the Trojan army, the main Trojan hero in the Iliad. He was the son of the last Trojan king Priam and Hecuba (the second wife of King Priam). According to other sources, he was the son of Apollo.

Return of Hector's body to Troy

Perseus

Perseus was the son of Zeus and Danae, the daughter of Acrisius, king of Argos. He defeated the monster Gorgon Medusa, was the savior of the princess Andromeda. Perseus is mentioned in Homer's Iliad.

A. Canova "Perseus with the head of the Gorgon Medusa." Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)
Author: Yucatan - Own work, from Wikipedia
Gorgon Medusa - the most famous of the three Gorgon sisters, a monster with a woman's face and snakes instead of hair. Her gaze turned a man to stone.
Andromeda is the daughter of the Ethiopian king Cepheus and Cassiopeia (had divine progenitors). Cassiopeia once boasted that she was superior to the beauty of the Nereids (sea deities, daughters of Nereus and the oceanids of Dorida, resembling Slavic mermaids in appearance), the angry goddesses turned to Poseidon with a request for revenge, and he sent a sea monster that threatened death to Kefey's subjects. The oracle of Ammon announced that the wrath of the deity would be tamed only when Cepheus sacrificed Andromeda to the monster, and the inhabitants of the country forced the king to decide on this sacrifice. Chained to a cliff, Andromeda was left to the mercy of the monster.

Gustave Doré "Andromeda Chained to a Rock"
In this position, Perseus saw her. He was struck by her beauty and promised to kill the monster if she agreed to marry him (Perseus). Andromeda's father Kefey gladly agreed to this, and Perseus accomplished his feat by showing the face of the Gorgon Medusa to the monster, thereby turning him into stone.

Perseus and Andromeda
Not wanting to reign in Argos after the accidental murder of his grandfather, Perseus left the throne to his kinsman Megapenthus, and he himself went to Tiryns (an ancient city on the Peloponnese peninsula). Founded Mycenae. The city got its name due to the fact that Perseus lost the tip (mike) of the sword in the vicinity. It is believed that among the ruins of Mycenae, the underground spring of Perseus has been preserved.
Andromeda bore Perseus a daughter, Gorgofon, and six sons: Perseus, Alcaeus, Sthenelus, Eleus, Mestor, and Electryon. The eldest of them, Persian, was considered the ancestor of the Persian people.

Famous heroes of the ancient world

Agamemnon is one of the main characters of the ancient Greek epic, the son of the Mycenaean king Atreus and Aeropa, the leader of the Greek army during the Trojan War.

Amphitrion is the son of the king of Tiryns Alkey and the daughter of Pelop Astidamia, the grandson of Perseus. Amphitryon took part in the war against the teleboys who lived on the island of Taphos, which was waged by his uncle, the Mycenaean king Electrion.

Achilles - in Greek mythology, one of the greatest heroes, the son of King Peleus, the king of the Myrmidons and the sea goddess Thetis, the grandson of Aeacus, the protagonist of the Iliad.

Ajax - the name of two participants in the Trojan War; both fought near Troy as applicants for the hand of Helen. In the Iliad, they often appear side by side and are compared to two mighty lions or bulls.

Bellerophon is one of the main characters of the older generation, the son of the Corinthian king Glaucus (according to other sources, the god Poseidon), the grandson of Sisyphus. Bellerophon's original name is Hippo.

Hector is one of the main characters of the Trojan War. The hero was the son of Hecuba and Priam, the king of Troy. According to legend, he killed the first Greek who set foot on the land of Troy.

Hercules is the national hero of the Greeks. Son of Zeus and the mortal woman Alcmene. Gifted with mighty strength, he performed the most difficult work on earth and accomplished great feats. Having atoned for his sins, he ascended Olympus and achieved immortality.

Diomedes is the son of the Aetolian king Tydeus and the daughter of Adrastus Deipyla. Together with Adrast he took part in the campaign and the ruin of Thebes. As one of Helen's suitors, Diomedes subsequently fought near Troy, leading a militia on 80 ships.

Meleager is the hero of Aetolia, the son of the Calydonian king Oineus and Alfea, the husband of Cleopatra. Member of the campaign of the Argonauts. Meleager was most famous for his participation in the Calydonian hunt.

Menelaus is the king of Sparta, the son of Atreus and Aeropa, the husband of Helen, the younger brother of Agamemnon. Menelaus, with the help of Agamemnon, gathered friendly kings for the Ilion campaign, and he himself put up sixty ships.

Odysseus - "angry", king of the island of Ithaca, son of Laertes and Anticlea, husband of Penelope. Odysseus is the famous hero of the Trojan War, also famous for his wanderings and adventures.

Orpheus is the famous Thracian singer, the son of the river god Eagra and the muse Calliope, the husband of the nymph Eurydice, who set trees and rocks in motion with his songs.

Patroclus is the son of one of the Argonauts of Menetius, a relative and ally of Achilles in the Trojan War. As a boy, he killed his friend during a dice game, for which his father sent him to Peleus in Phthia, where he was brought up with Achilles.

Peleus is the son of the Aeginian king Aeacus and Endeida, the husband of Antigone. For the murder of his half-brother Phocus, who defeated Peleus in athletic exercises, he was expelled by his father and retired to Phthia.

Pelops is the king and national hero of Phrygia, and then of the Peloponnese. Son of Tantalus and the nymph Euryanassa. Pelops grew up on Olympus in the company of the gods and was the favorite of Poseidon.

Perseus is the son of Zeus and Danae, the daughter of the king of Argos Acrisius. Slayer of the Gorgon Medusa and savior of Andromeda from the dragon's claims.

Talphibius - a messenger, a Spartan, together with Eurybatus was the herald of Agamemnon, carrying out his instructions. Talthybius, together with Odysseus and Menelaus, gathered an army for the Trojan War.

Teucer is the son of Telamon and the daughter of the Trojan king Hesion. The best archer in the Greek army near Troy, where more than thirty defenders of Ilion fell from his hand.

Theseus is the son of the Athenian king Aeneas and Ethera. He became famous for a number of exploits, like Hercules; kidnapped Helena with Peyrifoy.

Trophonius is originally a chthonic deity, identical with Zeus the Underground. According to popular belief, Trophonius was the son of Apollo or Zeus, the brother of Agamed, the pet of the goddess of the earth - Demeter.

Phoroneus is the founder of the Argive state, the son of the river god Inach and the hamadryad Melia. He was honored as a national hero; sacrifices were made at his grave.

Thrasymedes is the son of the Pylos king Nestor, who arrived with his father and brother Antiloch near Ilion. He commanded fifteen ships and took part in many battles.

Oedipus is the son of the Finnish king Laius and Jocasta. He killed his father and married his mother without knowing it. When the crime was discovered, Jocasta hanged herself, and Oedipus blinded himself. Died pursued by Erinyes.

Aeneas is the son of Anchises and Aphrodite, a relative of Priam, the hero of the Trojan War. Aeneas, like Achilles among the Greeks, is the son of a beautiful goddess, a favorite of the gods; in battles he was defended by Aphrodite and Apollo.

Jason, the son of Aison, on behalf of Pelius, set off from Thessaly for the Golden Fleece to Colchis, for which he equipped the campaign of the Argonauts.

The Encyclopedia of Mythology website contains more than two hundred and fifty articles about famous heroes and legendary figures of the ancient world, which can be found in our mythological dictionary.

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HEROES

HEROES

ancient mythology

Achilles
Hector
Hercules
Odysseus
Orpheus
Perseus
Theseus
Oedipus
Aeneas
Jason

Achilles -
one of the greatest heroes in Greek mythology,
son of King Peleus and the sea goddess Thetis.
Zeus and Poseidon wanted to have a son from the beautiful Thetis,
but the titan Prometheus warned them,
that the child will surpass the greatness of his father.
And the gods prudently arranged the marriage of Thetis with a mortal.
Love for Achilles, as well as the desire to make him invulnerable and
to give immortality forced Thetis to bathe the child in the river Styx,
flowing through Hades, the land of the dead.
Since Thetis was forced to hold her son by the heel, t
this part of the body remained defenseless.
Achilles was mentored by the centaur Chiron, who fed him
entrails of lions, bears and wild boars, taught to play the cithara and sing.
Achilles grew up a fearless warrior, but his immortal mother, knowing
that participation in the campaign against Troy will bring death to the son,
she dressed him up as a girl and hid him among the women in the palace of Tsar Lykomed.
When the leaders of the Greeks became aware of the prediction of the priest Kalhant,
the grandson of Apollo, that without Achilles the campaign against Troy is doomed to failure,
they sent the cunning Odysseus to him.
Arriving at the king under the guise of a merchant, Odysseus laid out before the assembled
women's jewelry interspersed with weapons.
The inhabitants of the palace began to examine the jewelry,
but suddenly, at the sign of Odysseus, an alarm sounded -
the girls fled in fright, and the hero grabbed his sword, betraying himself with his head.
After being exposed, Achilles willy-nilly had to sail to Troy,
where he soon quarreled with the Greek leader Agamemnon.
According to one version of the myth, this happened because,
wanting to provide the Greek fleet
favorable wind, Agamemnon secretly from the hero,
under the pretext of marriage with Achilles, summoned to Aulis
his daughter Iphigenia and sacrificed her to the goddess Artemis.
Angered, Achilles retired to his tent, refusing to fight.
However, the death of his faithful friend and brother Patroclus
at the hands of the Trojan Hector forced
Achilles to immediate action.
Having received armor as a gift from the blacksmith god Hephaestus,
Achilles slew Hector with a blow of a spear and twelve days
mocked his body near the tomb of Patroclus.
Only Thetis was able to convince her son to give the remains of Hector to the Trojans.
for funeral rites
the sacred duty of the living towards the dead.
Returning to the battlefield, Achilles slew hundreds of enemies.
But his own life was coming to an end.
Arrow of Paris, aptly directed by Apollo,
inflicted a mortal wound on the heel of Achilles,
the only vulnerable spot on the hero's body.
Thus perished the valiant and presumptuous Achilles,
the ideal of the great commander of antiquity, Alexander the Great.

1. Teaching Achilles
Pompeo Batoni, 1770

2.Achilles at Lycomedes
Pompeo Batoni, 1745

3. Ambassadors of Agamemnon to Achilles
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
1801, Louvre, Paris

4. The centaur Chiron returns the body
Achilles by his mother Thetis
Pompeo Batoni, 1770

HECTOR -
in ancient Greek mythology, one of the main characters of the Trojan War.
The hero was the son of Hecuba and Priam, the king of Troy.
Hector had 49 brothers and sisters, but among the sons of Priam it was he who was famous
with his strength and courage. According to legend, Hector struck the first Greek to death,
who set foot on the land of Troy, - Protesilaus.
The hero became especially famous in the ninth year of the Trojan War,
challenging Ajax Telamonides to battle.
Hector promised his enemy not to desecrate his bodies
in case of defeat and not to take off his armor and demanded the same from Ajax.
After a long struggle, they decided to stop the fight and as a sign
mutual respect exchanged gifts.
Hector hoped to defeat the Greeks despite Cassandra's prediction.
It was under his leadership that the Trojans broke into the fortified camp of the Achaeans,
approached the navy and even managed to set fire to one of the ships.
The legends also describe the battle between Hector and the Greek Patroclus.
The hero defeated his opponent and removed the armor of Achilles from him.
The gods took a very active part in the war. They split into two camps
and helped each of his favorites.
Hector was patronized by Apollo himself.
When Patroclus died, Achilles, obsessed with revenge for his death,
tied the defeated dead Hector to his chariot and
dragged him around the walls of Troy, but the body of the hero was not touched by decay,
not a bird, since Apollo protected him in gratitude for
that Hector during his lifetime helped him more than once.
Based on this circumstance, the ancient Greeks concluded that
that Hector was the son of Apollo.
According to myths, Apollo persuaded Zeus at the council of the gods
hand over Hector's body to the Trojans,
to be buried with honor.
The supreme god ordered Achilles to give the body of the deceased to his father Priam.
Since, according to legend, the tomb of Hector was in Thebes,
the researchers suggested that the image of the hero is of Boeotian origin.
Hector was a very revered hero in ancient Greece,
which proves the existence of his image
on ancient vases and antique plastic.
Usually they depicted scenes of Hector's farewell to his wife Andromache,
the battle with Achilles and many other episodes.

1. Andromache at the body of Hector
Jacques Louis David
1783, Louvre, Paris

]

HERCULES -
in ancient Greek mythology, the greatest of the heroes,
son of Zeus and the mortal woman Alcmene.
Zeus needed a mortal hero to defeat the giants,
and he decided to give birth to Hercules.
The best mentors taught Hercules various arts, wrestling, archery.
Zeus wanted Hercules to become the ruler of Mycenae or Tiryns, the key fortresses on the approaches to Argos,
but jealous Hera upset his plans.
She struck Hercules with madness, in a fit of which he killed
wife and three of their sons.
To atone for a heavy guilt, the hero had to serve Eurystheus for twelve years,
king of Tiryns and Mycenae, after which he was granted immortality.
The most famous is the cycle of legends about the twelve labors of Hercules.
The first feat was to obtain the skin of a Nemean lion,
whom Hercules had to strangle with his bare hands.
Having defeated the lion, the hero dressed his skin and wore it as a trophy.
The next feat was the victory over the hydra, the sacred nine-headed snake of Hera.
The monster lived in a swamp near Lerna, not far from Argos.
The difficulty was that instead of the head cut off by the hero, the hydra
immediately grew two new ones.
With the help of his nephew Iolaus, Hercules mastered the fierce Lernean hydra -
the young man burned the neck of each head cut off by the hero.
True, the feat was not counted by Eurystheus, since Hercules was helped by his nephew.
The next feat was not so bloody.
Hercules should have caught the Kerinean doe, the sacred animal of Artemis.
Then the hero caught the Erymanthian boar, which was devastating the fields of Arcadia.
At the same time, the wise centaur Chiron accidentally died.
The fifth feat was the cleaning of the Augean stables from manure,
what the hero did in one day, directing the waters of the nearest river at them.
The last of the feats performed by Hercules in the Peloponnese was
expulsion of Stymphalian birds with pointed iron feathers.
Sinister birds were afraid of copper rattles,
made by Hephaestus and given to Hercules
favored by the goddess Athena.
The seventh feat was the capture of a fierce bull, which Minos, king of Crete,
refused to sacrifice to the god of the sea Poseidon.
The bull copulated with the wife of Minos Pasiphae, who gave birth from him to the Minotaur, a man with a bull's head.
Hercules performed the eighth labor in Thrace,
where he subjugated the cannibal mares of King Diomedes to his power.
The remaining four feats were of a different kind.
Eurystheus ordered Hercules to get the girdle of Hippolyta, queen of the warlike Amazons.
Then the hero kidnapped and delivered to Mycenae the cows of the three-headed giant Gerion.
After that, Hercules brought Eurystheus the golden apples of the Hesperides, for which he had to
strangle the giant Antaeus and deceive Atlas, holding the firmament on his shoulders.
The last feat of Hercules - a journey to the kingdom of the dead - was the most difficult.
With the assistance of the queen of the underworld, Persephone, the hero was able to bring out
and deliver the three-headed dog Kerberos (Cerberus), the guardian of the underworld, to Tiryns.
The end of Hercules was terrible.
The hero died in terrible agony, wearing a shirt that his wife Dejanira,
on the advice of the centaur Ness, dying at the hands of Hercules,
soaked this half-man-half-horse with poisonous blood.
When the hero of the last strength climbed the funeral pyre,
purple lightning struck from heaven and
Zeus accepted his son into the host of immortals.
Some of the exploits of Hercules are immortalized in the names of the constellations.
For example, the constellation Leo is in memory of the Nemean lion,
the constellation of Cancer reminds of the huge cancer Karkina,
sent by the Hero to help the Lernean hydra.
In Roman mythology, Heracles corresponds to Hercules.

1. Hercules and Kerberos
Boris Vallejo, 1988

2. Hercules and Hydra
Gustave Moreau, 1876

3. Hercules at the Crossroads
Pompeo Batoni, 1745

4. Hercules and Omphala
François Lemoine, ca.1725

ODYSSEUS -
"angry", "angry" (Ulysses). In Greek mythology, the king of the island of Ithaca,
one of the leaders of the Achaeans in the Trojan War.
He is famous for his cunning, dexterity and amazing adventures.
The brave Odysseus was sometimes considered the son of Sisyphus, who seduced Anticlea
even before marriage with Laertes,
and according to some versions, Odysseus is the grandson of Autolycus, "the perjurer and thief", the son of the god Hermes,
inherited their mind, practicality and enterprise.
Agamemnon, the leader of the Greeks, had high hopes for the ingenuity and intelligence of Odysseus.
Together with the wise Nestor, Odysseus was instructed to persuade the great warrior
Achilles to take part in the Trojan War on the side of the Greeks,
and when their fleet was stuck in Aulis, it was Odysseus who tricked his wife
Release Agamemnon Clytemnestra to Aulis Iphigenia
under the pretext of her marriage to Achilles.
In reality, Iphigenia was intended to be a sacrifice to Artemis,
who otherwise disagreed
provide the Greek ships with a fair wind.
It was Odysseus who came up with the idea with the Trojan horse, which brought victory to the Achaeans.
The Greeks pretended to lift the siege from the city, and went to sea,
leaving a huge hollow horse on the shore,
inside the body of which a detachment of soldiers hid under the leadership of Odysseus.
The Trojans, rejoicing at the departure of the Achaeans, dragged the horse into the city.
They decided to present the statue as a gift to Athena and provide the city with the patronage of the gods.
At night, armed Achaeans poured out of the horse through a secret door,
killed the guards and opened the gates of Troy.
Hence the ancient saying: "Fear the Achaeans (Danaans) who bring gifts," and
expression "Trojan horse".
Troy fell, but the brutal massacre perpetrated by the Greeks
caused the strongest wrath of the gods, especially Athens,
after all, the favorite of the gods, Cassandra, was raped in her sanctuary.
The wanderings of Odysseus were a favorite story of the Greeks and Romans,
who called him Ulysses.
From Troy, Odysseus headed for Thrace,
where he lost many people in the battle with the Kikons.
Then a storm carried him to the land of lotophages ("lotus eaters"),
whose food made the aliens forget about their homeland.
Later, Odysseus fell into the possession of the Cyclopes (Cyclopes),
being a prisoner of the one-eyed Polyphemus, the son of Poseidon.
However, Odysseus and his companions managed to avoid certain death.
On the island of the lord of the winds, Aeol, Odysseus received a gift - fur,
filled with fair winds,
but the curious sailors loosened the fur and the winds scattered in all directions,
stop blowing in the same direction.
Then the ships of Odysseus were attacked by the Laestrigons, a tribe of cannibal giants,
but the hero managed to get to the island of Eya, the possession of the sorceress Circe (Kirki).
With the help of Hermes, Odysseus was able to force the sorceress to return
human appearance to members of his team,
whom she turned into pigs.
Further, on the advice of Kirka, he visits the underworld of the dead,
where the shadow of the blind soothsayer Tiresias warns the brave Odysseus
about the dangers ahead.
Leaving the island, the ship of Odysseus sailed past the coast,
where sweet-voiced sirens with their marvelous singing
lured sailors to sharp rocks.
The hero ordered his companions to cover their ears with wax and tie themselves to the mast. Happily passing the wandering rocks of Plankta,
Odysseus lost six men who were dragged away and devoured by the six-headed Sketa (Scylla).
On the island of Trinacia, as Tiresias predicted, hungry travelers
seduced by the fat herds of the sun god Helios.
As punishment, these sailors died from a storm sent by Zeus at the request of Helios.
The surviving Odysseus was almost swallowed by the monstrous whirlpool of Charybdis.
Exhausted from exhaustion, he was washed up on the island of the sorceress Calypso,
who married him and proposed marriage.
But even the prospect of immortality did not seduce Odysseus,
rushing home, and seven years later the gods forced
the nymph in love to let the traveler go.
After another shipwreck, Odysseus, with the help of Athena, took the form
poor old man, returned home, where for many years his wife Penelope was waiting for him.
Besieged by noble suitors, she played for time, announcing that she would marry,
when he finishes weaving a shroud for his father-in-law Laertes.
However, at night Penelope unraveled what was woven during the day.
When the servants revealed her secret, she agreed to marry the one
who can draw the bow of Odysseus.
The test was passed by an unknown beggar old man, who, throwing off his rags,
turned out to be a mighty Odysseus.
After twenty years of separation, the hero embraced his faithful Penelope,
which Athena before the meeting awarded with a rare beauty.
According to some versions of the myth, Odysseus, unrecognized, fell at the hands of Telegon,
his son from Circe (Kirki), according to others -
died peacefully at an advanced age.

1. Odysseus in the cave of the Cyclops Polyphemus
Jacob Jordaens, 1630

2. Odysseus and Sirens
John William Waterhouse, 1891

3. Circe and Odysseus
John William Waterhouse 1891

4. Penelope waiting for Odysseus
John William Waterhouse, 1890

ORPHEUS -
in ancient Greek mythology, a hero and a traveler.
Orpheus was the son of the Thracian river god Eagra and the muse Calliope.
He was known as a talented singer and musician.
Orpheus took part in the campaign of the Argonauts, with his game on the forming
and by his prayers he calmed the waves and helped the rowers of the Argo.
The hero married the beautiful Eurydice, and when she suddenly died from a snakebite,
followed her to the underworld.
The guardian of the underworld, the evil dog Cerberus,
Persephone and Hades were enchanted by the magical music of the young man.
Hades promised to return Eurydice to earth on the condition that
that Orpheus will not look at his wife until he enters his house.
Orpheus could not restrain himself and looked at Eurydice,
as a result, she remained forever in the realm of the dead.
Orpheus did not treat Dionysus with due respect, but honored Helios,
whom he named Apollo.
Dionysus decided to teach the young man a lesson and sent a maenad at him,
who tore the musician to pieces and threw him into the river.
Parts of his body were collected by the Muses, who mourned the death of a beautiful youth.
The head of Orpheus floated down the river Gebr and was found by the nymphs,
then she got to the island of Lesbos, where she was received by Apollo.
The musician's shadow fell into Hades, where the couple were reunited.

1. Orpheus and Eurydice
Frederic Leighton, 1864

2. Nymphs and the head of Orpheus
John Waterhouse, 1900

PERSEUS -
in Greek mythology, the ancestor of Hercules, the son of Zeus and Danae,
daughter of the king of Argos Acrisius.
Hoping to prevent the fulfillment of the prophecy about the death of Acrisius at the hands of his grandson,
Danae was imprisoned in a copper tower, but the almighty Zeus penetrated there,
turning into a golden rain, and conceived Perseus.
The terrified Acrisius seated the mother and child
into a wooden box and threw it into the sea.
However, Zeus helped his beloved and son safely
get to Serif Island.
The matured Perseus was sent by the local ruler Polydectes,
who fell in love with Danae, in search of the Gorgon Medusa,
with a glance that turns all living things into stone.
Fortunately for the hero, Athena hated Medusa and, according to one of the myths,
out of jealousy, she rewarded the once beautiful gorgon with deadly beauty.
Athena taught Perseus what to do.
First, the young man, following the advice of the goddess, went to the old women-grays,
three of them had one eye and one tooth.
By cunning, having taken possession of the eye and tooth, Perseus returned them to the grays in exchange
to indicate the way to the nymphs who gave him a cap of invisibility,
winged sandals and a Medusa head bag.
Perseus flew to the western end of the world, to the Gorgon's cave, and,
looking at the reflection of the mortal Medusa in his copper shield, cut off her head.
Putting it in a bag, he sped off in an invisibility cap,
unnoticed by the snake-haired sisters of the monster.
On the way home, Perseus saved the beautiful Andromeda from the sea monster.
and married her.
Then the hero went to Argos, but Acrisius,
having learned about the arrival of his grandson, he fled to Larissa.
And yet he did not escape fate - during the festivities in Larissa,
participating in competitions, Perseus threw a heavy bronze disk,
hit Acrisius in the head and struck him to death.
The grief-stricken inconsolable hero did not want to rule in Argos
and moved to Tiryns.
After the death of Perseus and Andromeda, the goddess Athena raised the spouses to heaven, turning them into constellations.

1. Perseus and Andromeda
Peter Paul Rubens, 1639

2. The sinister head of the Gorgon
Edward Burne-Jones, 1887

THESEUS -
("strong"), in Greek mythology, a hero, the son of the Athenian king Aegeus and Ephra.
The childless Aegeus received advice from the Delphic oracle - not to untie
your wineskin until you return home. Aegeus did not guess the prediction, but the Troesen king Pittheus,
with whom he was visiting, he realized that Aegeus was destined to conceive a hero. He got the guest drunk and put him to bed
with his daughter Ephra. On the same night, Poseidon also approached her.
Thus was born Theseus, the great hero, the son of two fathers.
Before leaving Ephra, Aegeus led her to a boulder, under which he hid his sword and sandals.
If a son is born, he said, let him grow, mature,
and when he can move the stone,
then send it to me. Theseus grew up, and Ephra discovered the secret of his birth.
The young man easily took out his sword and sandals, and on the way to Athens he dealt
with the robber Sinis and the Crommion pig.
Theseus was able to defeat the monstrous Minotaur, the bull-man,
only with the help of the princess Ariadne, who fell in love with him, who gave him a guiding thread.
In Athens, Theseus learned that fifty sons of his cousin Pallas claimed the throne of Aegeus,
and Aegeus himself fell under the power of the sorceress Medea,
abandoned by Jason, who hoped that her son Med would receive the throne.
Theseus hid his origin, but Medea, knowing who he was,
persuaded Aegeus to give the stranger a bowl of poison.
Theseus was saved by the fact that his father recognized his sword, with which the hero cut meat.
Theseus performed the following feats for the benefit of Athens.
He dealt with the sons of Pallas and the marathon
bull that ravaged the fields, defeated the bull-man Minotaur.
The monster that lived in the labyrinth was given to be eaten by young Athenians
as an atoning sacrifice for the death of the king's son in Athens.
When Theseus volunteered to fight the Minotaur, his old father fell into despair.
They agreed that if Theseus escaped death, then, returning home,
change the sail from black to white.
Theseus, having killed the monster, got out of the labyrinth thanks to the daughter of Minos, Ariadne, who fell in love with him,
following the thread tied at the entrance (the guiding "thread of Ariadne").
Theseus and Ariadne then secretly fled to the island of Naxos.
Here Theseus left the princess and fate punished him.
Returning home, Theseus forgot to change the sail as a sign of victory.
Theseus' father Aegeus, seeing the black cloth, threw himself off the cliff into the sea.
Theseus accomplished a number of other feats. He captured the queen of the Amazons, Hippolyta,
who gave birth to his son Hippolyta, gave shelter to the outcast Oedipus and his daughter Antigone.
True, Theseus was not among the Argonauts;
at this time he helped the king of the Lapiths Pirithous
kidnap the mistress of Hades Persephone.
For this, the gods decided to forever leave the daredevil in Hades,
But Theseus was saved by Hercules.
However, grief again knocked on his house when the second wife, Phaedra,
longed for his son Hippolytus, who was horrified to keep silent about her passion.
Humiliated by the refusal, Phaedra hanged herself,
in a suicide note accusing her stepson of trying to dishonor her.
The young man was expelled from the city,
and he died before his father knew the truth.
In his old age, Theseus impudently kidnapped the twelve-year-old daughter of Zeus Helen,
declaring that only she is worthy of being his wife,
but Helen's brothers, the Dioscuri, rescued their sister and expelled Theseus.
The hero died on the island of Skyros at the hands of the local king, who,
fearing the still mighty Theseus, he pushed the guest off the cliff.

1. Theseus and the Minotaur
Vase 450g. BC.

2. Theseus
with Ariadne and Phaedra
B. Jennari, 1702

3. Theseus and Ephra
Lovren de la Hire, 1640

OEDIPUS -
a descendant of Cadmus, from the Labdakid clan, the son of the Theban king Laius and Jocasta, or Epicaste,
beloved hero of Greek folk tales and tragedies, due to the multitude of which
it is very difficult to imagine the myth of Oedipus in its original form.
According to the most common legend, the oracle predicted Lai
about the birth of a son who will kill him himself,
marries his own mother and brings disgrace upon the entire Labdakid household.
Therefore, when Lai's son was born, the parents, piercing his legs
and tying them together (why they swelled up),
sent him to Cithaeron, where Oedipus was found by a shepherd,
sheltered the boy and then brought him to Sicyon,
or Corinth, to King Polybus, who raised the adopted child as his own son.
Having once received a reproach at a feast for doubtful origin,
Oedipus asked for clarification
to the oracle and received advice from him - to beware of patricide and incest.
As a result, Oedipus, who considered Polybus his father, left Sicyon.
On the road he met Lai, started a quarrel with him, and in his temper
killed him and his retinue.
At this time in Thebes the monster Sphinx was devastating,
asking for several years in a row
to each a riddle and devouring all those who did not guess it.
Oedipus solved this riddle
(what creature walks on four legs in the morning, two at noon,
and in the evening at three? The answer is man
as a result of which the Sphinx threw herself off a cliff and died.
In gratitude for delivering the country from a long disaster, the Theban citizens
made Oedipus their king and gave him the widow of Laius, Jocasta -
his own mother.
Soon the double crime committed by Oedipus out of ignorance was revealed,
and Oedipus gouged out his eyes in despair, and Jocasta took her own life.
According to an ancient legend (Homer, Odyssey, XI, 271 et seq.)
Oedipus remained to reign in Thebes and died,
pursued by the Erinyes.
Sophocles tells about the end of Oedipus' life differently:
when the crimes of Oedipus were revealed, the Thebans with the sons of Oedipus:
Eteocles and Polynices at the head expelled the aged and blind king from Thebes,
and he, accompanied by his faithful daughter Antigone, went to the place of Colon
(in Attica), where in the sanctuary of Erinyes,
who at last, through the intervention of Apollo, subdued their anger,
ended his life of misery.
His memory was considered sacred, and his grave was one of the palladiums of Attica.
As a character, Oedipus is displayed in the tragedies of Sophocles "Oedipus Rex" and
"Oedipus in Colon" (both tragedies are available in poetic Russian translation
D. S. Merezhkovsky, St. Petersburg, 1902),
in the tragedy of Euripides "Phoenician women"
(poetic Russian translation by I. Annensky, "The World of God", 1898, No. 4)
and in Seneca's tragedy Oedipus.
There were many other poetic works dealing with the fate of Oedipus.

1. Bookplate by Sigmund Freud.
The ex-libris depicts Oedipus the King talking to the Sphinx.

2. Oedipus and the Sphinx
J.O.Ingres

3. Oedipus and the Sphinx, 1864
Gustave Moreau

4. Oedipus the Wanderer, 1888
Gustave Moreau

AENEAS -
in Greek and Roman mythology, the son of the handsome shepherd Anchises and Aphrodite (Venus),
participant in the defense of Troy during the Trojan War, a glorious hero.
A brave warrior, Aeneas participated in decisive battles with Achilles and escaped death
only through the intercession of his divine mother.
After the fall of devastated Troy, at the behest of the gods, he left the burning city
and together with the old father,
wife Creusa and young son Askaniy (Yul),
capturing images of the Trojan gods,
accompanied by satellites on twenty ships, he set off in search of a new homeland.
Having survived a series of adventures and a terrible storm, he reached the Italian city of Kuma,
and then ended up in Latium, a region in Central Italy.
The local king was ready to give for Aeneas (widowed along the way) his daughter Lavinia
and give him land to found a city.
Having won in a duel Turnn, the leader of the warlike tribe of rutuls
and pretender to the hand of Lavinia,
Aeneas settled in Italy, which became the successor to the glory of Troy.
His son Askaniy (Yul) was considered the progenitor of the Yuliev clan,
including the famous emperors Julius Caesar and Augustus.

1. Venus giving Aeneas armor made by Vulcan, 1748
Pompeo Batoni

2. Mercury appearing to Aeneas (fresco), 1757
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

3. The battle of Aeneas with the harpies
Francois Perrier, 1647

Jason -
("healer"), in Greek mythology, the great-grandson of the god of the winds Eol, the son of King Iolk Aeson and Polymede.
Hero, leader of the Argonauts.
When Pelias overthrew his brother Aeson from the throne, he, fearing for the life of his son,
gave him under the care of the wise centaur Chiron, who lived in the Thessalian forests.
The Delphic oracle predicted to Pelias that a man in one sandal would destroy him.
This explains the fear of the king when the matured Jason returned to the city,
lost his sandal along the way.
Pelias decided to get rid of the impending threat and promised to recognize Jason as the heir if he, risking his life, would get the golden fleece in Colchis.
Jason and his team on the Argo ship, having experienced many adventures, returned to their homeland with a wonderful rune.
With their success - victory over the dragon and formidable warriors,
sprouting from his teeth,
they were largely obliged to the Colchis princess Medea, since Eros,
at the request of Athena and Hera, who patronized Jason,
instilled in the heart of the girl love for the hero.
Upon their return to Iolk, the Argonauts learned
that Pelias killed Jason's father and all his relatives.
According to one version, Pelias dies from the spell of Medea, whose name means "insidious."
According to another, Jason resigned himself to exile, lived happily with Medea for ten years.
and they had three children.
Then the hero married Princess Glauca; V
in revenge, Medea killed her and killed her sons from Jason.
Years passed. The aged hero eked out his days, until one day he wandered onto the pier,
where the famous "Argo" stood.
Suddenly, the mast of the ship, rotten from time, gave way
and fell on Jason, who fell dead.

1. Jason and Medea
John William Waterhouse, 1890

2. Jason and Medea
Gustave Moreau, 1865



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