Reign Sisyphus was the founder and first king of Ephyra (supposedly the original name of
Corinth). In a fragment of
Pindar, he instead founds the Games (in honour of Melicertes) upon the instructions of a group of nymphs.
Conflict with Salmoneus Sisyphus and his brother
Salmoneus were known to hate each other, and Sisyphus consulted the
Oracle of Delphi on just how to kill Salmoneus without incurring any severe consequences for himself. From
Homer onward, Sisyphus was famed as the craftiest of men. He seduced Salmoneus's daughter
Tyro in one of his plots to kill Salmoneus, only for Tyro to slay their children when she discovered that Sisyphus was planning on using them to eventually dethrone her father.
Cheating death Sisyphus betrayed one of Zeus's secrets by revealing the whereabouts of the
Asopid Aegina to her father, the river god
Asopus, in return for causing a spring to flow on the Corinthian
acropolis. Before Sisyphus died, he had told his wife to throw his naked corpse into the middle of the public square (purportedly as a test of his wife's love for him). This caused Sisyphus to end up on the shores of the river
Styx when he was brought to the
underworld. Complaining to either Hades or
Persephone that this was a sign of his wife's disrespect for him, Sisyphus persuaded her to allow him to return to the
upper world, in order to scold his wife for not burying his body and giving it a proper funeral as a loving wife should. But when back in the world of the living, Sisyphus refused to return to the Underworld. He returned many years later either from dying of advanced age, or being forcibly dragged back there by
Hermes. In another version of the myth, Persephone was tricked by Sisyphus that he had been conducted to Tartarus by mistake, and so she ordered that he be released. In
Philoctetes by
Sophocles, there is a reference to the father of Odysseus (rumoured to have been Sisyphus, and not
Laërtes, whom we know as the father in the
Odyssey) upon having returned from the dead.
Euripides, in
Cyclops, also identified Sisyphus as Odysseus's father.
Punishment in the underworld As a punishment for his crimes, Hades made Sisyphus roll a huge boulder endlessly up a steep hill in
Tartarus. The maddening nature of the punishment was reserved for Sisyphus due to his
hubristic belief that his cleverness surpassed that of Zeus himself. Hades accordingly displayed his own cleverness by enchanting the boulder into rolling away from Sisyphus before he reached the top which ended up consigning Sisyphus to an eternity of useless efforts and unending frustration. Thus, pointless or interminable activities are sometimes described as "Sisyphean". Sisyphus was a common subject for ancient writers and was depicted by the painter
Polygnotus on the walls of the
Lesche at
Delphi. ==Interpretations==