[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Megara (wife of Heracles): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Don't think this is appropriate here
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:


In some traditions, in order to atone his guilt, he was forced to perform [[the Twelve Labours]], but in [[Heracles (Euripides)|Euripides' tragedy]], Heracles' return from his encounter with [[Cerberus]] in Hades begins the ''[[agon]]''.
In some traditions, in order to atone his guilt, he was forced to perform [[the Twelve Labours]], but in [[Heracles (Euripides)|Euripides' tragedy]], Heracles' return from his encounter with [[Cerberus]] in Hades begins the ''[[agon]]''.

==History==
{{Empty section|date=March 2013}}


==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 20:29, 26 March 2013

In Greek mythology, Megara (Μεγάρα) was the oldest daughter of Creon, king of Thebes. In reward for Heracles' defending Thebes from Orchomenus in single-handed battle, Creon offered his daughter Megara to Heracles,[1] and he brought her home to the house of Amphitryon.[2] She bore him a son and a daughter,[3] whom Heracles killed when Hera struck him with temporary madness; in their hero-tombs in Thebes they were venerated as the Chalkoarai.[4] In some sources Heracles slew Megara too,[5] in others, she was given to Iolaus when Heracles left Thebes forever.

In some traditions, in order to atone his guilt, he was forced to perform the Twelve Labours, but in Euripides' tragedy, Heracles' return from his encounter with Cerberus in Hades begins the agon.

History

Notes

  1. ^ Odyssey 11.269.
  2. ^ Euripides, Madness of Heracles.
  3. ^ The number of Megara's sons varies according to the source; the Theban tradition made them eight (Kereny 1959:185f notes Pindar's Fourth Isthmian Ode) but Euripides' Heracles reduced them to three, possibly for the exigencies of his stage tradition, Kereny notes (Kerenyi 1959:1186).
  4. ^ "Those on whom fell a curse of bronze" (Kerenyi 1959:186).
  5. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheke 2.6.1.

References

  • Kerenyi, Karl, The Heroes of the Greeks (Thames and Hudson) 1959.

External links

Preceded by
---
Wives of Heracles Succeeded by
Omphale