Myths featuring Hera

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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.

Philoctetes’ Abandonment on Lemnos and the Bow of Heracles

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Mosychlos, Lemnos, GreecePhiloctetes • Heracles • Odysseus

Philoctetes, a legendary archer and bearer of the Bow of Heracles, was abandoned on the desolate island of Lemnos by his fellow Greeks after suffering a debilitating and foul-smelling snake bite. For ten years, he survived in isolation until a prophecy revealed that Troy could only be defeated with his help. The story follows the moral conflict of the young Neoptolemus and the eventual...

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...

Tiresias’ Encounter with the Mating Snakes and Gender Transformation

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Cyllene (Kyllini), GreeceTiresias • Zeus • Hera

While walking on the slopes of Mount Cyllene, the young man Tiresias encountered two mating serpents and struck them with his staff, causing him to instantly transform into a woman. After living seven years in this new form, he encountered the same snakes again and struck them a second time to regain his male identity. This unique experience later led him to be the only mortal capable of...

Jason and the Argonauts: The Passage of the Clashing Rocks

🏛️ Greek MythologyBosphorus Strait, Istanbul, TurkeyJason • Phineus • Hera

Jason and his crew of Argonauts must navigate the Symplegades, two massive cliffs that crash together to crush any ship attempting to enter the Black Sea. Following the advice of the blind seer Phineus, Jason uses a dove to time the rocks' movement, allowing the Argo to narrowly escape destruction with the help of divine intervention. This victory solidified Jason's reputation and permanently...

Callisto’s Transformation into a Bear and Placement as a Constellation

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount Lykaion, Arcadia, GreeceCallisto • Zeus • Artemis

Callisto, a devoted follower of the goddess Artemis, is seduced by Zeus and subsequently transformed into a bear by the jealous Hera. Years later, her son Arcas nearly kills her during a hunt, leading Zeus to place them both in the heavens as the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor.

Zeus’ Defeat of Cronus and the Titans

🏛️ Greek MythologyMount OlympusZeus • Cronus • Rhea

The Titanomachy was the cosmic decade-long struggle between the older Titans and the younger Olympian gods. Led by Zeus, the Olympians revolted against the tyrannical Cronus, who had swallowed his children to prevent a prophecy of his overthrow. After freeing his siblings and enlisting the aid of the Cyclopes and Hundred-Handers, Zeus emerged victorious, ushering in the age of the Greek gods.

Heracles’ Birth and Strangling of Hera’s Serpents

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Thebes, GreeceHeracles • Alcmene • Zeus

Born to Alcmene and fathered by Zeus, the infant Heracles faced the wrath of a jealous Hera before he could even walk. While resting in his nursery in the city of Thebes, the infant hero was attacked by two deadly serpents sent by the Queen of the Gods. Demonstrating his divine strength for the first time, Heracles strangled the beasts with his bare hands, revealing his heroic destiny to his...

The Wedding of Peleus and Thetis and the Apple of Discord

🏛️ Greek MythologyCave of Chiron, Mount Pelion, GreecePeleus • Thetis • Eris

When the mortal hero Peleus married the sea-nymph Thetis on the slopes of Mount Pelion, the gods gathered for a celebration of unprecedented scale. However, the exclusion of Eris, goddess of discord, led her to throw a golden apple among the guests inscribed 'For the Fairest.' The resulting dispute between Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite set in motion the events of the Trojan War.