Road of Hercules The Road of Hercules is a route across Southern Gaul that is associated with the path Hercules took during his 10th labor of retrieving the Cattle of Geryon from the Red Isles. Hannibal took the same path on his march towards Italy and encouraged the belief that he was the second Hercules. However, there is evidence suggesting there were female worshippers of Apollo, Mars, Jupiter, and Hercules. They share a feast, and Evander tells the story of how Hercules defeated the monster Cacus, and describes him as a triumphant hero.
Hercules and the Roman triumph According to Livy (9.44.16) Romans were commemorating military victories by building statues to Hercules as early as 305 BCE. Also, philosopher
Pliny the Elder dates Hercules worship back to the time of Evander, by accrediting him with erecting a statue in the Forum Boarium of Hercules. Scholars agree that there would have been 5–7 temples in Augustan Rome. In the twentieth century, the
Farnese Hercules has inspired artists such as
Jeff Koons,
Matthew Darbyshire and
Robert Mapplethorpe to reinterpret Hercules for new audiences. The choice of deliberately white materials by Koons and Darbyshire has been interpreted as perpetuation of colourism in how the classical world is viewed. Mapplethorpe's work with black model Derrick Cross can be seen as a reaction to Neo-classical colourism, resisting the portrayal of Hercules as white.
Roman era File:Heracles Pio-Clementino Inv252.jpg|
Hercules of the Forum Boarium (Hellenistic, 2nd century BCE) File:Affresco romano eracle ebbro e onfale.JPG|Hercules drunk and
Omphale. Fresco from House of the Prince of Montenegro,
Pompeii, 25–35 CE File:Hercules Nessus MAN Napoli Inv9001.jpg|Hercules carrying his son
Hyllus looks at the centaur
Nessus, who is about to carry
Deianira across the river on his back. Fresco from Pompeii, 30–45 CE File:Herculaneum Collegio degli Augustali Ercole sull'Olimpo.jpg|Hercules in Olympus with
Juno and
Minerva, fresco from
Herculaneum, 1st century CE File:Hercules and Iolaus mosaic - Anzio Nymphaeum.jpg|Hercules and
Iolaus (1st century CE mosaic from the Anzio Nymphaeum, Rome) File:Hercules Hatra Iraq Parthian period 1st 2nd century CE.jpg|Hercules (
Hatra, Iraq,
Parthian period, 1st–2nd century CE) File:Muze 001.jpg|Hercules bronze statuette, 2nd century CE (museum of
Alanya, Turkey) File:Missorium Herakles lion Cdm Paris 56-345 n3.jpg|Hercules and the
Nemean Lion (detail),
silver plate, 6th century (
Cabinet des Médailles, Paris) File:Affresco romano - eracle ed onfale - area vesuviana.JPG|Heracles and
Omphale, Roman fresco,
Pompeian Fourth Style (45–79 CE),
Naples National Archaeological Museum, Italy File:Tesoro di hildesheim, argento, I sec ac-I dc ca., piatto da parata con ercole bambino e i serpenti 01.JPG|A Roman gilded silver bowl depicting the boy Hercules strangling two serpents, from the
Hildesheim Treasure, 1st century CE,
Altes Museum File:Head from statue of Herakles (Hercules) Roman 117-188 CE from villa of the emperor Hadrian at Tivoli, Italy BM 2.jpg|Head from statue of Herakles (Hercules) Roman 117–188 CE from villa of the emperor Hadrian at Tivoli, Italy at the British Museum File:Herakles with the Apples of the Hesperides Roman 1st century CE from a temple at Byblos Lebanon BM.jpg|Hercules (Herakles) with the Apples of the Hesperides Roman 1st century CE from a temple at Byblos, Lebanon at the British Museum File:Hercules from Cappadocia or Caesarea 1st century BCE - 1st century CE Walters Art Museum.jpg|Hercules from Cappadocia or Caesarea 1st century BCE – 1st century CE, Walters Art Museum File:Hercules slaying the Hydra Roman copy of 4th century BCE original by Lysippos Capitoline Museum.jpg|Hercules slaying the Hydra Roman copy of 4th century BCE original by Lysippos, Capitoline Museum File:Hercules Roman 1st century BCE - 1st century CE Walters Art Museum.jpg|Hercules Roman 1st century BCE – 1st century CE, Walters Art Museum File:Herakles and Telephos Louvre MR219.jpg|Herakles and Telephos Louvre MR219 File:Ercole seduto (epitrapezios), 50 ac-50 dc ca., con braccia, clava e gambe sotto il ginocchio di restauro 02.JPG|Hercules, 50 BCE – 50 CE, MAN Florence
Modern era File:Hendrik Goltzius, The Great Hercules, 1589, NGA 70311.jpg|
The Giant Hercules (1589) by
Hendrik Goltzius File:Lucas Faydherbe - Hercules.jpg|
Lucas Faydherbe,
Bust of Hercules – collection
King Baudouin Foundation File:Peter Paul Rubens cat01.jpg|
The Drunken Hercules (1612–1614) by
Rubens File:HerculeDejanire.jpg|
Hercules and Deianira (18th century copy of a lost original), from
I Modi File:Brooklyn Museum - Les Écuries d'Augias - Honoré Daumier.jpg|Hercules in the
Augean stable (1842,
Honoré Daumier) File:Hercules Comic Cover.JPG|
Comic book cover () File:Bartholomäus Spranger - Hercules, Deianira and the Centaur Nessus - Google Art Project.jpg|
Hercules, Deianira and the Centaur Nessus, by
Bartholomäus Spranger, 1580–1582 File:Henry IV en Herculeus terrassant l Hydre de Lerne cad La ligue Catholique Atelier Toussaint Dubreuil circa 1600.jpg|
Henry IV of France, as Hercules vanquishing the
Lernaean Hydra (i.e. the
Catholic League), by
Toussaint Dubreuil, .
Louvre Museum File:Herakles pyre Coustou Louvre MR1809.jpg|Hercules on the Pyre by Guillaume Coustou The Elder, 1704, Louvre MR1809
In numismatics Hercules was among the earliest figures on ancient Roman coinage, and has been the main motif of many collector coins and medals since. One example is the Austrian
20 euro Baroque Silver coin issued on September 11, 2002. The obverse side of the coin shows the Grand Staircase in the town palace of
Prince Eugene of Savoy in
Vienna, currently the Austrian Ministry of Finance. Gods and
demi-gods hold its flights, while Hercules stands at the turn of the stairs. File:Æ Triens 2710028.jpg|
Juno, with Hercules fighting a
Centaur on reverse (Roman, 215–15 BCE) File:Denarius Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus 1 Obverse.jpg|Club over his shoulder on a Roman
denarius () File:MAXIMINUS II-RIC VI 77-251201.jpg|
Maximinus II and Hercules with club and lionskin (Roman, 313 CE) File:5 French francs Hercule de Dupré 1996 F346-2 obverse.jpg|Commemorative
5-franc piece (1996), Hercules in center File:Caracalla Denarius Hercules RIC192.jpg|Hercules, as seen on a Denarius of the Roman Emperor Caracalla. Dated 212 CE
Military Six successive ships of the British
Royal Navy, from the 18th to the 20th century, bore the name
HMS Hercules. In the
French Navy, there were no fewer than nineteen ships called
Hercule, plus three more named
Alcide, which is another name of the same hero. Hercules's name was also used for five ships of the
US Navy, four ships of the
Spanish Navy, four of the
Argentine Navy, and two of the
Swedish Navy, as well as for numerous civilian sailing and steam ships. In modern aviation a
military transport aircraft produced by
Lockheed Martin carries the designation
Lockheed C-130 Hercules.
Operation Herkules was the German code-name given to an abortive plan for the invasion of
Malta during the
Second World War.
Other cultural references File:PillarsHerculesPeutingeriana.jpg|
Pillars of Hercules, representing the
Strait of Gibraltar (19th-century conjecture of the
Tabula Peutingeriana) File:Maczuga Herkulesa (background Castle Pieskowa Skała).jpg|
The Cudgel of Hercules, a tall
limestone rock formation, with
Pieskowa Skała Castle in the background File:Royal Coat of Arms of Greece.svg|Hercules as
heraldic supporters in the
royal arms of
Greece, in use 1863–1973. The phrase "Ηρακλείς του στέμματος" ("Defenders of the Crown") has pejorative connotations ("chief henchmen") in Greek.
In films A series of nineteen Italian Hercules movies were made in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The actors who played Hercules in these films were
Steve Reeves,
Gordon Scott, Kirk Morris,
Mickey Hargitay, Mark Forest, Alan Steel,
Dan Vadis,
Brad Harris,
Reg Park,
Peter Lupus (billed as
Rock Stevens), and Michael Lane. A number of English-dubbed Italian films that featured the name of Hercules in their title were not intended to be movies about Hercules. ==See also==