Character Archive

Myths featuring Hermes

Explore myths where Hermes appears across cultures, conflicts, sacred places, and recurring themes.

21 myths currently featured for Hermes.

Philemon and Baucis Transformed into Intertwined Trees

🏛️ Greek MythologyTyana (Kemerhisar), Cappadocia, TurkeyPhilemon • Baucis • Zeus

In the ancient lands of Phrygia, an elderly couple named Philemon and Baucis offered hospitality to the gods Zeus and Hermes who were disguised as weary travelers. While their wealthy neighbors turned the strangers away, the humble couple shared their meager resources with joy. As a reward for their piety and kindness, the gods spared them from a great flood and eventually transformed them...

The Drowning of Helle

🏛️ Greek MythologyHellespont (Dardanelles Strait)Helle • Phrixus • Athamas

Helle and her brother Phrixus escape their murderous stepmother Ino by flying away on the back of a magical Golden Ram. During their flight across the narrow strait between Europe and Asia, Helle loses her balance, falls into the sea, and perishes. The waters were thereafter named the Hellespont in her memory, while her brother continued on to reach the land of Colchis.

Hermes’ Rescue of Ares from the Bronze Jar

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Ossa, Thessaly, GreeceHermes • Ares • Otus

When the giant twin sons of Poseidon, the Aloadae, captured Ares and imprisoned him within a bronze jar, the god of war languished for thirteen months. It was the messenger god Hermes who eventually discovered his location and used his divine cunning to steal the weakened Ares away from his captors. This myth highlights the transition from brute primitive force to the strategic intelligence...

Hephaestus Forging Weapons in His Volcano

🏛️ Greek MythologyVulcano Island, Aeolian Islands, ItalyHephaestus • Zeus • Hera

Beneath the smoking crater of Vulcano, the god Hephaestus operates a divine forge where the heat of the earth is harnessed to craft the weapons of the gods. This myth connects the geological activity of the Aeolian Islands to the industry of the divine blacksmith, explaining the island's smoke and tremors as the sounds of his tireless hammer. From the shield of Achilles to the lightning bolts...

Dionysus’ Birth from the Flaming Semele

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Thebes, GreeceZeus • Semele • Hera

The mortal princess Semele, daughter of King Cadmus of Thebes, is seduced by Zeus and becomes pregnant with Dionysus. Tricked by a jealous Hera into demanding that Zeus reveal his true divine glory, Semele is consumed by celestial fire. To save the unborn child, Zeus sews the infant into his own thigh, leading to the miraculous second birth of the god of wine.

Amphion and Zethus Building the Walls of Thebes

🏛️ Greek MythologyCadmea, Thebes, GreeceAmphion • Zethus • Antiope

Amphion and Zethus, the twin sons of Zeus and Antiope, were separated from their mother at birth and raised by shepherds on Mount Cithaeron. Upon reuniting with their mother and avenging her mistreatment at the hands of King Lycus and Queen Dirce, they seized the throne of Thebes. The brothers are most famous for building the city's massive fortifications, where Zethus used his great strength...

Atreus Serving Thyestes His Own Sons

🏛️ Greek MythologyPalace of Mycenae, Peloponnese, GreeceAtreus • Thyestes • Aerope

The myth of the Thyestean Feast depicts the ultimate act of vengeance within the cursed House of Atreus. After his brother Thyestes seduced his wife and stole his throne, King Atreus of Mycenae feigned a reconciliation but instead murdered Thyestes' children and served them as a meal to their father. This horrific event solidified a generational curse that would plague their descendants for...

Pelops’ Chariot Race Against King Oenomaus

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Olympia, Peloponnese, GreecePelops • Oenomaus • Hippodamia

To win the hand of Hippodamia, the hero Pelops challenged King Oenomaus to a deadly chariot race. Using a divine golden chariot from Poseidon and a secret betrayal involving the king's charioteer Myrtilus, Pelops defeated the king and established the foundation of the Olympic Games. However, his betrayal of Myrtilus also brought a lasting curse upon his bloodline, known as the House of Atreus.

The Punishment of Sisyphus in Tartarus

🏛️ Greek MythologyAcrocorinthSisyphus • Zeus • Thanatos

Sisyphus, the clever and hubristic King of Corinth, was condemned by the gods for outsmarting death and betraying divine secrets. His eternal punishment in Tartarus involves pushing a massive boulder up a steep hill, only for it to roll back down just as it reaches the summit. This myth explores themes of mortality, the consequences of trickery, and the eternal struggle against the inevitable.

Baucis and Philemon’s Hospitality to Disguised Zeus and Hermes

🏛️ Greek MythologyTyana (Kemerhisar), Cappadocia, TurkeyZeus • Hermes • Baucis

In the Phrygian region near Tyana, Zeus and Hermes descended in disguise to test human hospitality. After being rejected by an entire city, they were welcomed by the impoverished elderly couple Baucis and Philemon, who shared their meager food and were ultimately rewarded with a sacred temple and an eternal union as intertwining trees.