Character Archive

Myths featuring Ra

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

262 myths currently featured for Ra.

Heracles’ Theft of the Cattle of the Monster Geryon

🏛️ Greek MythologyErytheia (Modern Cadiz)Heracles • Geryon • Orthrus

For his tenth labor, the Greek hero Heracles was commanded by King Eurystheus to travel to the western edge of the world and steal the legendary red cattle of Geryon. Geryon was a formidable giant with three bodies, three heads, and six arms, living on the island of Erytheia. After a perilous journey across the Libyan desert and the Atlantic Ocean, Heracles defeated Geryon and his monstrous...

The Ninth Labor: The Girdle of Hippolyta

🏛️ Greek MythologyThemiscyra (Terme River), TurkeyHeracles • Hippolyta • Admete

Heracles is tasked by King Eurystheus to retrieve the magical girdle of Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons, for his daughter Admete. Though the Queen initially agrees to gift the belt peacefully, the goddess Hera intervenes by inciting a riot, leading to a tragic battle. Heracles eventually secures the artifact and returns it to Mycenae after a series of further adventures in the East.

Heracles’ Stealing of the Flesh-Eating Mares of Diomedes

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Abdera, Thrace, GreeceHeracles • Diomedes of Thrace • Abderus

As his eighth labor, Heracles was sent to Thrace to capture the four man-eating mares of King Diomedes. After a fierce battle with the King's army and the tragic loss of his companion Abderus, Heracles tamed the beasts by feeding them their own cruel master. The hero then founded the city of Abdera in honor of his fallen friend before delivering the horses to King Eurystheus.

Heracles’ Capture of the Cretan Bull

🏛️ Greek MythologyHeraklion region, Crete, GreeceHeracles • King Minos • Eurystheus

For his seventh labor, the hero Heracles was dispatched to the island of Crete to capture a divine bull that had been driven to madness by Poseidon. After wrestling the powerful beast to submission in the rugged landscape near Heraklion, Heracles transported it back to the court of King Eurystheus. The myth serves as a bridge between the legends of the Peloponnese and the Minoan traditions of...

Heracles’ Defeat of the Stymphalian Birds

🏛️ Greek MythologyLake Stymphalia, Corinthia, GreeceHeracles • Athena • Hephaestus

For his sixth labor, the hero Heracles was commanded to drive away a flock of man-eating birds that infested the marshy shores of Lake Stymphalia. Unable to enter the swamp or reach the birds, Heracles utilized divine bronze clappers provided by the goddess Athena to startle the creatures into flight. Once they were airborne, he used his legendary archery skills to pick them off, effectively...

Heracles’ Cleansing of the Augean Stables

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Elis, Peloponnese, GreeceHeracles • Augeas • Eurystheus

As his fifth labor, Heracles was tasked with cleaning the vast and filthy stables of King Augeas in a single day. Rather than using his hands, the hero used his ingenuity to reroute the rivers Alpheus and Peneus to wash away thirty years of accumulated waste. Although he succeeded, the labor became a source of great conflict when King Augeas refused to pay and Eurystheus refused to count the task.

Heracles’ Capture of the Erymanthian Boar

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Erymanthos, Peloponnese, GreeceHeracles • Eurystheus • Pholus

As his fourth labor, the hero Heracles was tasked by King Eurystheus to capture a monstrous, rampaging boar alive from the slopes of Mount Erymanthos. Heracles successfully drove the beast into deep snow to exhaust it before binding it and carrying it back to the city of Tiryns. The sight of the creature was so terrifying that Eurystheus famously hid inside a bronze storage jar to escape it.

Heracles’ Capture of the Ceryneian Hind

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Ceryneia, Achaea, GreeceHeracles • Eurystheus • Artemis

Tasked by King Eurystheus as his third labor, Heracles was commanded to capture the elusive Ceryneian Hind without harming it. The sacred creature, possessing golden antlers and bronze hooves, was faster than any arrow and dedicated to the goddess Artemis. After a year-long pursuit that took him to the edge of the world and back, Heracles finally captured the animal and successfully...

Heracles’ Defeat of the Lernean Hydra

🏛️ Greek MythologyLake Lerna, PeloponneseHeracles • Iolaus • Lernaean Hydra

As his second labor for King Eurystheus, the hero Heracles traveled to the swamps of Lerna to destroy a terrifying multi-headed serpent known as the Hydra. With the assistance of his nephew Iolaus, Heracles managed to cauterize the monster's necks to prevent its heads from regenerating. Although successful, the labor was later disqualified by the king because Heracles had received help during...

Heracles’ Slaying of the Nemean Lion

🏛️ Greek MythologyCave of the Nemean Lion, Nemea, GreeceHeracles • Nemean Lion • King Eurystheus

As the first of his twelve labors, the hero Heracles was tasked by King Eurystheus to slay a monstrous lion terrorizing the region of Nemea. The beast possessed a golden hide that was impervious to all weapons, forcing Heracles to rely on his immense physical strength to defeat it. By strangling the lion and using its own claws to skin it, Heracles secured both his victory and his iconic...