![]() According to some accounts, they had feathers made of bronze which they could shoot at people below like arrows. The man-eating Stymphalian birds were a flock that terrorized the people of Arcadia. Hercules could do nothing while he was bound in service to his cousin, but returned years later to lay siege to the city and collect his payment. The running water washed the filth away in a matter of moments, leaving the stables as clean as the day they were built.Īugeas, however, tried to go back on his promised payment. He diverted a nearby river to run through the stables. The job was meant to humiliate the great hero by making him do dirty, menial labor. The king said that if the monumental task could be accomplished in a single day, he would give Hercules one-tenth of the herd as payment. Hercules did not tell Augeas of his quest, but offered to clean the stables on his own. The animal’s stables had not been cleaned for several years. King Augeas of Elis was the owner of an enormous herd of immortal cattle. Eurystheus was so frightened of the animal that he jumped into a buried storage jar to hide himself. Hercules dragged the boar back to Mycenae. Eventually, it slowed enough that the hero was able to capture it with a net. Hercules chased the giant boar through the snow until it was exhausted. When the startled animal ran away, the hero gave chase. He found the boar in a grove of trees during the winter and shouted at it. Hercules was ordered to bring the beast back alive, so he could not risk wounding it. The enormous boar descended from Mount Erymanthus to destroy the nearby farmlands. ![]() Artemis was furious, but allowed him to borrow the deer to complete his task regardless. Instead, he chased it on foot for a full year.Įxhausted by the hunt, Hercules finally slowed his quarry by wounding it slightly with an arrow. Hercules did not want to shoot the deer, though, out of respect for Artemis. ![]() It was elusive and said to be so fast that it could outrun even an arrow. The golden-horned deer was sacred to Artemis. The Hydra’s potent venom was applied to his own lionskin cloak to kill him in an agonizing manner. Many years later, this would end his own life, however. Hercules dipped his arrows in it, making poisoned weapons that could kill any foe. The Hydra’s powerful venom proved to be a valuable tool, however. He buried it nearby so it could not pose a threat to anyone else. With the multiple heads defeated, Hercules was able to remove the final, immortal one. His nephew Iolaus assisted with a burning torch that he used to cauterize the stumps before they could regenerate. Hercules soon realized that the only way to defeat the Hydra was to stop it from growing more heads. Whenever a head was cut off, more would grow back in its place. The central head was immortal and the others, whose numbers varied by writer, were capable of rejuvenation. The Hydra was a many-headed serpent that was impossible to kill. The lion’s pelt became one of his most identifiable attributes. Thereafter, Hercules wore the lion’s skin as a cloak instead of conventional armor. He could not cut it with any knives, however, until Athena advised him to use the animal’s own claws. Once it had been killed, Hercules wanted to take the pelt as a trophy. Even his club did not injure it.īecause his weapons were of no use, Hercules fought the beast with his bare hands. Hercules quickly realized that his arrows were of little use against the lion’s thick skin. Its hide was virtually impenetrable, so it destroyed anyone who tried to get close to it. The Nemean Lion was a vicious predator who no hunters had been able to kill. The twelve labors of Hercules came to be known as his most famous adventures. The list was later expanded to twelve when the king declared two of the tasks had been done incorrectly. Eurystheus assigned him ten seemingly impossible tasks to earn atonement. Hercules was unaware that both the oracle and the king were in the service of Hera. When he returned to his senses he consulted an oracle to ordered him to cleanse himself by entering into the service of his cousin, King Eurystheus of Mycenae, for ten years. In a frenzied state, the son of Zeus killed his own wife and children. In her jealousy, she inflicted him with madness. Hera hated her stepson from the moment he was born.
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