The Labors of Hercules
The Labors of Hercules
The goddess Hera, determined to make trouble for Hercules, made him lose his mind.
In a confused and angry state, he killed his own wife and children.
When he awakened from his "temporary insanity," Hercules was shocked and upset
by what he'd done. He prayed to the god Apollo for guidance, and the god's oracle
told him he would have to serve Eurystheus, the king of Tiryns and Mycenae, for
twelve years, in punishment for the murders.
As part of his sentence, Hercules had to perform twelve Labors, feats so difficult that
they seemed impossible. Fortunately, Hercules had the help of Hermes and Athena,
sympathetic deities who showed up when he really needed help. By the end of these
Labors, Hercules was, without a doubt, Greece's greatest hero.
His struggles made Hercules the perfect embodiment of an idea the Greeks
called pathos, the experience of virtuous struggle and suffering which would lead to
fame and, in Hercules' case, immortality.
The Twelve Labours of Heracles were a number of tasks that the mythical hero Heracles was told
to complete by King Eurystheus. It all started when Hera, who loathed Heracles for he was a living
example of her husband's infidelities, drove the hero mad, making him kill his wife Megara and his
children. When he realised what he had done, he deeply regretted it and went to the Oracle
of Delphi to ask for penance. There, he was told to serve Eurystheus, king of Tiryns, for twelve
years; if he completed all tasks he would be given, he would become immortal.
Although Heracles did not like this as he considered Eurystheus to be a lesser person than himself,
he decided to follow the Oracle's advice.
When he arrived in Tiryns, Eurystheus initially asked Heracles to perform ten labours. These ten
labours were: