Heracles
Heracles,the greatest of Greek heroes. His name is that of a mortal (compare Diocles), and has been interpreted as ‘Glorious through Hera’. In this case, the bearer is taken as being—or so his parents would hope—within the protection of the goddess. This is at odds with the predominant tradition (see below), wherein Heracles was harassed rather than protected by the goddess: perhaps the hostility was against worshippers of Heracles who rejected allegiance to the worshippers of Hera on whom the hero depended. This could have happened when Argos had established control over the Heraion (a temple to Hera, some distance from Argos itself) and Tiryns (possibly reflected in an apparent falling-off of settlement at Tiryns late in the 9th cent. bc: A. Foley, The Argolid 800–600 bc (1988), 40–2). Some of the inhabitants of Tiryns might have emigrated to Thebes, taking their hero with him. Traditionally Heracles' mother and her...
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