Hippodamia died shortly after Polypoetes' birth, after which Pirithous went to visit Theseus at Athens only to discover that Theseus' own wife,
Phaedra, who, according to
Ovid, felt left out by her husband's love for Pirithous, was dead. Thus, Pirithous and Theseus pledged to marry daughters of
Zeus; Theseus chose
Helen of Sparta and together they kidnapped her when she was 10 years of age and decided to hold on to her until she was old enough to marry. Pirithous chose a more dangerous prize:
Persephone herself. Theseus objected, and tried to talk him out of it, as this act would be too blasphemous; but Pirithous insisted, and Theseus was bound by his oaths, so he agreed. They left Helen with Theseus' mother,
Aethra, at
Aphidnae, and traveled to the
underworld. When they stopped to rest, they found themselves unable to stand up from the rock as they saw the
Furies appear before them.
Rescue Heracles later freed Theseus from the stone, during his
Twelfth and final Labour, but the earth shook when he attempted to free Pirithous. He had committed too great a crime for wanting the wife of one of the great gods as his own bride. According to a
scholium on
Aristophanes, in a lost play by
Euripides, Hades had Pirithous fed to
Cerberus for his
impiety. By the time Theseus returned to Athens, the
Dioscuri (Helen's twin brothers
Castor and Pollux) had taken Helen back to
Sparta; they had taken captive Aethra as well as Pirithous' sister, Physadeia, and they became handmaidens of Helen and later followed her to Troy. The rescue of Theseus and Pirithous acquired a humorous tone in the realm of Attic comedy, in which Heracles attempted to free them from the rock to which they had been bound together in the
Underworld (for having tried to carry off
Persephone). He succeeded in freeing only Theseus and left behind his buttocks attached to the rocks. Due to this Theseus came to be called
Hypolispos, meaning "with hinder parts rubbed smooth". This may have been a later invention. Pirithous was worshiped at Athens, along with Theseus, as a hero. == Gallery ==