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Heracles and human
Upon his assumption into immortality on Olympus, Heracles is given ambrosia by Athena, while the hero Tydeus is denied the same thing when the goddess discovers him eating human brains.
The immediate necessity for the Labours of Heracles is as penance for Heracles ' murder of his own family, in a fit of madness, which had been sent by Hera ; however, further human rather than mythic motivation is supplied by mythographers who note that their respective families had been rivals for the throne of Mycenae.
This is the human condition according to the Christian reinterpretation of the Choice of Heracles.
Traces of such a theory appear to underline various myths of a hero ( such as Heracles ) with both a human and a divine father.
Despite his agony, he comforted Io with the information that she would be restored to human form and become the ancestress of the greatest of all heroes, Heracles ( Hercules ).
* The half-brother of Heracles, being the son of Alcmene and her human husband Amphitryon, whereas Heracles was her son by Zeus.
The latter reminded her of mighty Heracles ( now, an Olympian himself ) who held the record of wounding not one but two Olympians as a human.
A hero was more than human but less than a god, and various kinds of supernatural figures came to be assimilated to the class of heroes ; the distinction between a hero and a god was less than certain, especially in the case of Heracles, the most prominent, but a typical hero.

Heracles and Amphitryon
The Heracleidae fell into disagreement about where to take Alcmene's body, with some wishing to take her corpse back to Argos, and others wishing to take it to Thebes to be buried with Amphitryon and Heracles ' children by Megara.
His twin mortal brother, son of Amphitryon, was Iphicles, father of Heracles ' charioteer Iolaus.
Only the former was the son of Amphitryon because Heracles was the son of Zeus, who had visited Alcmene during Amphitryon's absence.
In the play Heracles by Euripides, Amphitryon survives to witness the murders of Heracles ' children and wife.
However, the Perseids included the great hero, Heracles, stepson of Amphitryon, son of Alcaeus.
In Greek mythology, Heracles and his twin Iphicles are examples of heteropaternal superfecundation, with Heracles fathered by the god Zeus and Iphicles by a mortal man Amphitryon.
10. 4 ) mentions the tripod dedicated there by Amphitryon when his son Heracles had been Daphnephoros.

Heracles and was
Another male lover was Cyparissus, a descendant of Heracles.
In Greek mythology, Alcmene or Alcmena () was the mother of Heracles.
In Homer's Iliad, when Alcmene was about to give birth to Heracles, Zeus announced to all the gods that on that day a child, descended from Zeus himself, would be born who would rule all those around him.
As soon as Lucina leapt up, Alcmene was released from her spell and gave birth to Heracles.
It is said that after Heracles was apotheosised, Hyllus, having pursued and killed Eurystheus, cut off Eurystheus ' head and gave it to Alcmene, who gouged out the eyes with weaving pins.
More purely Hellenic myth would have Amathus settled instead by one of the sons of Heracles, thus accounting for the fact that he was worshiped there.
One of the tasks imposed upon Heracles by Eurystheus was to obtain possession of the girdle of the Amazonian queen Hippolyta.
* Andromache, an Amazon who fought Heracles and was defeated ; only known from vase paintings.
When Alexander was trying to show that he is divine so that the Greeks and Macedonians would perform proskynesis to him, Anaxarchus said that Alexander could " more justly be considered a god than Dionysus or Heracles " ( Arrian, 104 )
Its mythical foundation was attributed to Heracles ( on behalf of his fallen friend Abderus ), its historical one to a colony from Klazomenai.
According to the Roman poet Ovid ( Fasti v. 379 ), the constellation honors the centaur Chiron, who was tutor to many of the earlier Greek heroes including Heracles ( Hercules ), Theseus, and Jason, the leader of the Argonauts.
Capturing Cerberus, without using weapons, was the final labour assigned to Heracles ( Hercules ) by King Eurystheus, in recompense for the killing of his own children by Megara after he was driven insane by Hera, and therefore was the most dangerous and difficult.
When Heracles had pulled Theseus first from his chair, some of his thigh stuck to it ( this explains the supposedly lean thighs of Athenians ), but the earth shook at the attempt to liberate Pirithous, whose desire to have the wife of a god for himself was so insulting he was doomed to stay behind.
Heracles was able to overpower Cerberus and proceeded to sling the beast over his back, dragging it out of the underworld through a cavern entrance in the Peloponnese and bringing it to Eurystheus.
The king was so frightened of the beast that he jumped into a pithos, and asked Heracles to return it to the underworld in return for releasing him from his labors.
Capturing Cerberus alive was the twelfth and final labour of Heracles.
In Greek mythology, Eurystheus ( pronounced, meaning " broad strength " in folk etymology and pronounced ) was king of Tiryns, one of three Mycenaean strongholds in the Argolid, although other authors including Homer and Euripides cast him as ruler of Argos: Sthenelus was his father and the " victorious horsewoman " Nicippe his mother, and he was a grandson of the hero Perseus, as was his opponent Heracles.
In the contest of wills between Hera and Zeus over whose candidate would be hero, fated to defeat the remaining creatures representing an old order and bring about the reign of the Twelve Olympians, Eurystheus was Hera's candidate and Heracles — though his name implies that at one archaic stage of myth-making he had carried " Hera's fame " — was the candidate of Zeus.

Heracles and also
Their descendants ruled Mycenae from Electryon down to Eurystheus, after whom Atreus attained the kingdom, and would also include the great hero Heracles.
His use of language and meter in Works and Days and Theogony distinguishes him also from the author of the Shield of Heracles.
* Heracles also appears in Aristophanes ' The Frogs, in which Dionysus seeks out the hero to find a way to the underworld.
As symbol of masculinity and warriorship, Heracles also had a number of male lovers.
Diomus is also mentioned by Stephanus of Byzantium as the eponym of the deme Diomeia of the Attic phyle Aegeis: Heracles is said to have fallen in love with Diomus when he was received as guest by Diomus ' father Collytus.
There is also, in some versions, reference to an episode where Heracles met and impregnated a half-serpentine woman, known as Echidna ; her children, known as the Dracontidae, were the ancestors of the House of Cadmus.
In Greek mythology, the Heracleidae () or Heraclids were the numerous descendants of Heracles ( Hercules ), especially applied in a narrower sense to the descendants of Hyllus, the eldest of his four sons by Deianira ( Hyllus was also sometimes thought of as Heracles ' son by Melite ( naiad ).
Misogynist is also found in the Greek — misogunēs ()— in Deipnosophistae ( above ) and in Plutarch's Parallel Lives, where it is used as the title of Heracles in the history of Phocion.
Alcmene, Castor, Heracles, and Melicertes, were also among the figures sometimes considered to have been resurrected to physical immortality.
Alexander the Great and the kings of Macedon also claimed to be descended from Heracles.
Temples dedicated to Hephaestus, Heracles and Asclepius were also constructed in the sacred area, which includes a sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone ( formerly known as the Temple of Castor and Pollux ); the marks of the fires set by the Carthaginians in 406 BC can still be seen on the sanctuary's stones.
This giant child also appears in other myths ( in some of which she is shown as a young strong woman, similar to a female version of the Greek Heracles ).
The intercession by Heracles is also represented on a painted vase ( circa 380-300 BC ).
The allusion to Heracles ’ fight with the lion is also meant to incite why it is that Pytheas fights for the wreaths of the games: to obtain the undying glory that the heroes of old now possess for their deeds.
In Milo's case, Aristotle began the myth-making process with reports likening Milo unto Heracles in his enormous appetite, and Athenaeus continued the process with the story of Milo carrying a bull — a feat also associated with Heracles.
Deianira is also the name of a second character in Greek mythology, an Amazon killed by Heracles during his ninth labour, the quest for the girdle of Hippolyta.
Heracles fathered illegitimate children all across Greece and then fell in love with Iole ( also called Omphal ).
In Greek mythology, Hyllus ( Ὕλλος ) ( also Hyllas ) was the son of Heracles and Deianira, husband of Iole, nursed by Abia.
He and Peleus were also close friends with Heracles, assisting him on his expeditions against the Amazons and against Troy ( see below ).
Telamon also figures in both versions of Heracles ' sacking of Troy, which was ruled by King Laomedon ( or Tros in the alternate versions ).
However, it is also claimed that Priam simply happened to be absent during Heracles attack on Troy, being campaigning in Phrygia.
This aspect was also associated with Anion ( or Arion ) whom Heracles rode, who later inspired tales of Pegasus.

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