At Lydia A Heraclid royal family ruled
Lydia as well, but sources differ as to their maternal parentage and lineage. The Heraclids are widely agreed to have been descended from Heracles and a woman of
Iardanus, but sources differ on whether this woman was his girl or his illustrious daughter,
Queen Omphale.
Herodotus writes that Heracles sired this dynasty with a slave-girl of
Iardanus (who, since she was unnamed in Herodotus' account, might be
Omphale). In this account, the first of this line to rule was their great-great-grandson, named
Agron. After Agron, Lydia would be ruled by Heraclid kings over 22 generations for 505 years. This line of kings would include
Meles, followed by his son
Candaules. Candaules was infamous for his voyeuristic appetites (see
candaulism and the
Ring of Gyges). He would be overthrown and usurped by his servant
Gyges, who would go on to found the
Mermnad dynasty. However, most other sources say the Heraclids of Lydia were not descended from
Iardanus' anonymous slave-girl, but from his daughter
Omphale - a Lydian queen who held Heracles in servitude for a year. Their romance was characterised by an inversion of gender norms, with Omphale taking the masculine role and Heracles taking the feminine role in both social and sexual contexts.
Pseudo-Apollodorus writes that the Lydian Heraclids were descended Omphale and Heracles' son
Agelaus, who would go on to be an ancestor of
Crœsus.
Dionysus of Halicarnassus also writes that Heracles and Omphale sired royal children, such as
Tyrrhenus,
founder of the
Etruscans. This might be supported by
Pausanias, who writes that Heracles had a Lydian son named
Tyrsenus, which is used in other texts as a variation of
Tyrrhenus. According to
Xanthus of Lydia, the Heraclid dynasty of Lydia traced their descent to a son of Heracles and Omphale named Tylon, and were called Tylonidai. "Tylon" is a variation of
Tylos, a native Anatolian deity
interpreted as Heracles.
At Sparta At
Sparta, the Heraclids formed two dynasties ruling jointly: the
Agiads and the
Eurypontids. Other
Spartiates also claimed Heraclid descent, such as
Lysander.
At Corinth At Corinth the Heraclids ruled as the
Bacchiadae dynasty before the aristocratic revolution, which brought a Bacchiad aristocracy into power.
At Argos A descendant of Heracles,
Temenus, was the first king of
Argos, who later counted the famous tyrant
Pheidon.
In Macedonia After becoming the kings of Argos, the Heraclid line of
Temenus would later go on to rule
Macedonia. This was the
Argead Dynasty of Macedonia (so-named because of its origins in Argos). It was established in Macedonia a Temenid descendant of Heracles, who left Argos and settled in Macedonia, establishing his own kingdom. However, sources differ as to which Temenid founded the Macedonian branch of the family.
Herodotus and
Thucydides write that the dynasty was founded by
Perdiccas, who conquered the Macedonian plain and founded a fort, around which grew the kingdom.. However, later sources (including
Marsyas of Pella, as well as Roman sources such as
Livy) say the Argead dynasty was established in Macedonia by
Caranus. According to Marsyas of Pella, Caranus did not just simply conquer Macedonia; he first received a prophecy from the
Oracle at Delphi advising him to do so, and therefore had a divine justification for his expedition. The Kingdom of Macedonia under the Argead dynasty would be famous for its global conquests under
Alexander the Great, beginning the
Hellenistic period. Under the reign of
Philip II - Alexander's father and predecessor - the Argead Dynasty had extended its hegemony over all of
Upper Macedonia, and had become the most powerful kingdom in the Aegean apart from
Achaemenid Persia.
Alexander the Great would continue Philip's conquests in
Greece, and then conquer the
Persian Empire, and expand as far as
Egypt and
India.
In Thessaly The
Aleuad dynasty, which dominated Thessalian politics from the sixth century BCE until the Hellenistic period, claimed descent variously from Thessalus and Haemon, both believed to be sons of Heracles.
In modern times In modern times, Heraclid lineage has been claimed by the
House of Burgundy and the
kings of Castile. The seventeenth-century Spanish king
Philip IV, a descendant of both houses, commissioned the artist
Francisco de Zurbarán to paint a series of ten works depicting Hercules, as part of the decoration of his
Buen Retiro Palace; these artworks were considered an allegory for the legitimacy of his rule. ==In Euripides' tragedy==