HERCULES
Birth
Hercules was the Roman name for the greatest hero of Greek mythology Heracles. Like most authentic heroes, Heracles had a god as one of his parents, being the son of the supreme deity
Zeus and a mortal woman. Zeus's queen Hera was jealous of Heracles, and when he was still an infant she sent two snakes to kill him in his crib. Heracles was found prattling delighted baby talk, a strangled serpent in each hand.

The Labors
When he had come of age and already proved himself an unerring marksman with a bow and arrow, a champion wrestler and the possessor of superhuman strength, Heracles was driven mad by
Hera. In a frenzy, he killed his own children. To atone for this crime, he was sentenced to perform a series of tasks, or "Labors", for his cousin Eurystheus, the king of Tiryns and Mycenae. By rights, Hercules should have been king himself, but Hera had tricked her husband
Zeus into crowning Eurystheus instead.
Labor One: The Nemean Lion
As his
first Labor, Heracles was challenged to kill the Nemean lion. This was no easy
feat, for the beast's parentage was supernatural and it was more of a monster
than an ordinary lion. Its skin could not be penetrated by spears or arrows.
Heracles blocked off the entrances to the lion's cave, crawled into the close
confines where it would have to fight face to face and throttled it to death
with his bare hands. Ever afterwards he wore the lion's skin as a cloak and its
gaping jaws as a helmet
Labor Two: The Hydra
King Eurystheus
was so afraid of his heroic cousin that when he saw him coming with the Nemean
lion on his shoulder, he hid in a storage jar. From this shelter he issued the
order for the next Labor. Heracles was to seek out and destroy the monstrous and
many-headed Hydra. The mythmakers agree that the Hydra lived in the swamps of
Lerna, but they seem to have had trouble counting its heads. Some said that the
Hydra had eight or nine, while others claimed as many as ten thousand. All
agreed, however, that as soon as one head was beaten down or chopped off, two
more grew in its place To make matters worse, the Hydra's very breath was
lethal. Even smelling its footprints was enough to kill an ordinary mortal.
Fortunately, Heracles was no ordinary mortal. He sought out the monster in its
lair and brought it out into the open with flaming arrows. But now the fight
went in the Hydra's favor. It twined its many heads around the hero and tried to
trip him up. It called on an ally, a huge crab that also lived in the swamp. The
crab bit Heracles in the heel and further impeded his attack. Heracles was on
the verge of failure when he remembered his nephew, Iolaus, the son of his twin
brother Iphicles.
Iolaus, who had driven Heracles to Lerna in a chariot, looked on in anxiety as his uncle became entangled in the Hydra's snaky heads. Finally he could bear it no longer. In response to his uncle's shouts, he grabbed a burning torch and dashed into the fray. Now, as soon as Heracles cut off one of the Hydra's heads, Iolaus was there to sear the wounded neck with flame. This kept further heads from sprouting. Heracles cut off the heads one by one, with Iolaus cauterizing the wounds. Finally Heracles lopped off the one head that was supposedly immortal and buried it deep beneath a rock
Labor Three: the Cerynitian Hind
The
third Labor was the capture of the Cerynitian hind. Though a female deer, this
fleet-footed beast had golden horns. It was sacred to Artemis, goddess of the
hunt, so Heracles dared not wound it. He hunted it for an entire year before
running it down on the banks of the River Ladon in Arcadia. Taking careful aim
with his bow, he fired an arrow between the tendons and bones of the two
forelegs, pinning it down without drawing blood. All the same, Artemis was
displeased, but Heracles dodged her wrath by blaming his taskmaster Eurystheus.
Labor Four: the Erymanthian Boar
The
fourth Labor took Heracles back to Arcadia in quest of an enormous boar, which
he was challenged to bring back alive. While tracking it down he stopped to
visit the centaur Pholus. This creature -- half-horse, half-man -- was examining
one of the hero's arrows when he accidentally dropped it on his foot. Because it
had been soaked in poisonous Hydra venom, Pholus succumbed immediately. Heracles
finally located the boar on Mount Erymanthus and managed to drive it into a
snowbank, immobilizing it. Flinging it up onto his shoulder, he carried it back
to Eurystheus, who cowered as usual in his storage jar
Labor Five: The Augean Stables
Eurystheus was very pleased with himself for dreaming up the next Labor, which
he was sure would humiliate his heroic cousin. Heracles was to clean out the
stables of King Augeas in a single day. Augeas possessed vast herds of cattle
which had deposited their manure in such quantity over the years that a thick
aroma hung over the entire Peloponnesus. Instead of employing a shovel and a
basket as Eurystheus imagined, Heracles diverted two rivers through the
stableyard and got the job done without getting dirty. But because he had
demanded payment of Augeas, Eurytheus refused to count this as a Labor.
Labor Six: The Stymphalian Birds
The
sixth Labor pit Heracles against the Stymphalian birds, who inhabited a marsh
near Lake Stymphalus in Arcadia. The sources differ as to whether these birds
feasted on human flesh, killed men by shooting them with feathers of brass or
merely constituted a nuisance because of their number. Heracles could not
approach the birds to fight them - the ground was too swampy to bear his weight
and too mucky to wade through. Finally he resorted to some castanets given to
him by the goddess Athena. By making a racket with these, he caused the birds to
take wing. And once they were in the air, he brought them down by the dozens
with his arrows.
Labor Seven: the Cretan Bull
Queen
Pasiphae of Crete had been inspired by a vengeful god to fall in love with a
bull, with the result that the Minotaur was born -- a monster half-man and
half-bull that haunted the Labyrinth of King Minos. Pasiphae's husband was
understandably eager to be rid of the bull, which was also ravaging the Cretan
countryside, so Hercules was assigned the task as his seventh Labor. Although
the beast belched flames, the hero overpowered it and shipped it back to the
mainland. It ended up near Athens, where it became the duty of another hero,
Theseus, to deal with it once more.
Labor Eight: the Mares of Diomedes
Next Heracles was instructed to bring Eurystheus the mares of Diomedes. These
horses dined on the flesh of travelers who made the mistake of accepting
Diomedes' hospitality. In one version of the myth, Heracles pacified the beasts
by feeding them their own master. In another, they satisfied their appetites on
the hero's squire, a young man named Abderus. In any case, Heracles soon rounded
them up and herded them down to sea, where he embarked them for Tiryns. Once he
had shown them to Eurystheus, he released them. They were eventually eaten by
wild animals on Mount Olympus.
Labor Nine: Hippolyte's Belt
The
ninth Labor took Heracles to the land of the Amazons, to retrieve the belt of
their queen for Eurystheus' daughter. The Amazons were a race of warrior women,
great archers who had invented the art of fighting from horseback. Heracles
recruited a number of heroes to accompany him on this expedition, among them
Theseus. As it turned out, the Amazon queen, Hippolyte, willingly gave Hercules
her belt, but Hera was not about to let the hero get off so easily. The goddess
stirred up the Amazons with a rumor that the Greeks had captured their queen,
and a great battle ensued. Heracles made off with the belt, and Theseus
kidnapped an Amazon princess
Labor Ten: the Cattle of Geryon
In
creating monsters and formidable foes, the Greek mythmakers used a simple
technique of multiplication. Thus Geryon, the owner of some famous cattle that
Heracles was now instructed to steal, had three heads and/or three separate
bodies from the waist down. His watchdog, Orthrus, had only two heads. This
Labor took place somewhere in the country we know as Spain. The hound Orthrus
rushed at Heracles as he was making off with the cattle, and the hero killed him
with a single blow from the wooden club which he customarily carried. Geryon was
dispatched as well, and Heracles drove the herd back to Greece, taking a wrong
turn along the way and passing through Italy.
Labor Eleven: the Apples of the
Hesperides
The Hesperides were nymphs entrusted by the goddess Hera with certain
apples which she had received as a wedding present. These were kept in a grove
surrounded by a high wall and guarded by Ladon, a many-headed dragon. The grove
was located in the far-western mountains named for Atlas, one of the Titans or
first generation of gods. Atlas had sided with one of his brothers in a war
against Zeus. In punishment, he was compelled to support the weight of the
heavens by means of a pillar on his shoulders. Heracles, in quest of the apples,
had been told that he would never get the them without the aid of Atlas. The
Titan was only too happy to oblige. He told the hero to hold the pillar while he
went to retrieve the fruit. But first Heracles had to kill the dragon by means
of an arrow over the garden wall. Atlas soon returned with the apples but now
realized how nice it was not to have to strain for eternity keeping heaven and
earth apart. Heracles wondered if Atlas would mind taking back the pillar just
long enough for him to fetch a cushion for his shoulder. The Titan obliged and
Heracles strolled off, neglecting to return.
Labor Twelve: the Capture of Cerberus
As his final Labor, Heracles was instructed to bring the hellhound Cerberus up
from Hades, the kingdom of the dead. The first barrier to the soul's journey
beyond the grave was the most famous river of the Underworld, the Styx. Here the
newly dead congregated as insubstantial shades, mere wraiths of their former
selves, awaiting passage in the ferryboat of Charon the Boatman. Charon wouldn't
take anyone across unless they met two conditions. Firstly, they had to pay a
bribe in the form of a coin under the corpse's tongue. And secondly, they had to
be dead. Heracles met neither condition, a circumstance which aggravated
Charon's natural grouchiness. Labor Twelve: the Capture of Cerberus (concluded)
But Heracles simply glowered so fiercely that Charon meekly conveyed him across
the Styx. The greater challenge was Cerberus, who had razor teeth, three heads, a venomous snake for a tail and another swarm of snakes
growing out of his back. These lashed at Heracles while Cerberus lunged for a
purchase on his throat. Fortunately, the hero was wearing his trusty lion's
skin, which was impenetrable by anything short of a thunderbolt from Zeus.
Heracles eventually choked Cerberus into submission and dragged him to Tiryns,
where he received due credit for this final Labor.
Death of Heracles
Heracles had a great many other
adventures, in after years as well as in between his Labors. It was poisonous
Hydra venom that eventually brought about his demise. He had allowed a centaur
to ferry his wife Deianara across a river, and the centaur had attacked her on
the other side. Heracles killed him with an arrow, but before he died the he
told Deinara to keep some of his blood for a love potion. Deinara used some on
Heracles' tunic to keep him faithful, little realizing that it had been poisoned
with Hydra venom from the arrow. Heracles donned the tunic and died in agony.
Heracles was the only hero to become a full-fledged god upon his demise, but even in his case there was his mortal aspect to be dealt with. By virtue of his spectacular achievements, even by heroic standards, he was given a home on Mount Olympus and a goddess for a wife. But part of him had come not from his father Zeus but from his mortal mother Alcmene, and that part was sent to the Underworld. As a phantasm it eternally roams the Elysian Fields in the company of other heroes.