Early years In
Greek mythology, Hades, the god of the Greek underworld, was the first-born son of the
Titans
Cronus and
Rhea. He had three older sisters,
Hestia,
Demeter, and
Hera, as well as a younger brother,
Poseidon, all of whom had been swallowed whole by their father as soon as they were born.
Zeus was the youngest child and through the machinations of their mother, Rhea, he was the only one that had escaped this fate. Upon reaching adulthood, Zeus managed to force his father to disgorge his siblings. After their release, the six younger gods, along with allies they managed to gather, challenged the elder gods for power in the
Titanomachy, a divine war. Armed with the
helm of invisibility forged for him by the
Cyclopes, Hades with his siblings and other divine allies defeated the Titans and became rulers in their place. The war lasted for ten years and ended with the victory of the younger gods. Following their victory, according to a single famous passage in the
Iliad (
Book XV, ln.187–93), Hades and his two brothers, Poseidon and Zeus, drew lots for realms to rule. Zeus received the sky, Poseidon received the seas, and Hades received the underworld, the unseen realm to which the souls of the dead go upon leaving the world as well as any and all things beneath the earth. Hades obtained his wife and queen,
Persephone, through abduction at the behest of Zeus. This myth is the most important one Hades takes part in; it also connected the
Eleusinian Mysteries with the Olympian pantheon, particularly as represented in the
Homeric Hymn to Demeter, which is the oldest story of the abduction, most likely dating back to the beginning of the 6th century BC. Hades was portrayed as passive and seldom portrayed negatively; his role was often maintaining relative balance. That said, he was also depicted as ruthless, hateful, and stern, and he held all of his subjects equally accountable to his laws. He was the key-holding jailor, the souls of the dead were his prisoners. Any other individual aspects of his personality are not given, as Greeks refrained from giving him much thought to avoid attracting his attention. Hades ruled the dead, assisted by others over whom he had complete authority. The House of Hades was described as full of "guests", though he rarely left the underworld. He cared little about what happened in the world above, as his primary attention was ensuring none of his subjects ever left his domain. He strictly forbade his subjects to leave his domain and would become quite enraged when anyone tried to leave, or if someone tried to steal the souls from his realm. His wrath was equally terrible for anyone who tried to cheat death or otherwise crossed him, as
Sisyphus and
Pirithous found out to their sorrow. While usually indifferent to his subjects, Hades was very focused on the punishment of these two people; particularly
Pirithous, as he entered the underworld in an attempt to steal Persephone for himself, and consequently was forced onto the "Chair of Forgetfulness". Hades was only depicted outside of the underworld once in myth, and even that is believed to have been an instance where he had just left the
gates of the underworld, which was when
Heracles shot him with an arrow as Hades was attempting to defend the city of Pylos. After he was shot, however, he traveled to Olympus to heal. Besides
Heracles, the only other living people who ventured to the underworld were also
heroes:
Odysseus,
Aeneas (accompanied by the
Sibyl),
Orpheus, to whom Hades showed uncharacteristic mercy at Persephone's urging, who was moved by Orpheus's music,
Theseus with
Pirithous, and, in a late romance,
Psyche. None of them were pleased with what they witnessed in the realm of the dead. In particular, the Greek war hero
Achilles, whom Odysseus conjured with a blood
libation, said:
Abduction of Persephone , from the tomb of Queen
Eurydice I of Macedon at
Vergina, Greece, 4th century BC The consort of Hades was
Persephone, daughter of
Zeus and
Demeter. Persephone did not submit to Hades willingly, but was abducted by him while picking flowers in the fields of
Nysa (her father, Zeus, had previously given Persephone to Hades, to be his wife, as is stated in the first lines of the
Homeric Hymn to Demeter). In protest of his act, Demeter cast a curse on the land and there was a great famine; though, one by one, the gods came to request she lift it, lest mankind perish and cause the gods to be deprived of their receiving gifts and sacrifices, Demeter asserted that the earth would remain barren until she saw her daughter again. Zeus then sends for his son,
Hermes, and instructs him to go down to the underworld in hopes that he may be able to convince Hades to allow Persephone to return to Earth, so that Demeter might see Persephone and cause the famine to stop. Hermes obeys and goes down to Hades's realm, wherein he finds Hades seated upon a couch, Persephone seated next to him. Hermes relays Zeus's message, and Hades complies, saying, Afterwards, Hades readies his chariot, but not before he secretly gives Persephone a pomegranate seed to eat; Hermes takes the reins, and he and Persephone make their way to the Earth above, coming to a halt in front of Demeter's temple at Eleusis, where the goddess has been waiting. Demeter and Persephone run towards each other and embrace one another, happy that they are reunited. Demeter, however, suspects that Persephone may have
eaten food while down in the underworld, and so she questions Persephone, saying: , fresco in the small
Macedonian royal tomb at
Vergina,
Macedonia, Greece, Persephone does admit that she ate the food of the dead, as she tells Demeter that Hades gave her a pomegranate seed and forced her to eat it. Persephone's eating the pomegranate seed binds her to Hades and the underworld, much to the dismay of Demeter. Zeus, however, had previously proposed a compromise, to which all parties had agreed: of the year, Persephone would spend one third with her husband. It is during this time, when Persephone is down in the underworld with her husband, that
winter falls upon the earth, "an aspect of sadness and mourning."
Visitors in the underworld The hero
Orpheus once descended into the underworld in search of his late wife
Eurydice, who died when a snake bit her. So lovely was the music he played that it charmed even Hades (as well as his wife Persephone), who allowed him to take Eurydice to the land of the living, as long as he did not look back at her on his way out. In another story,
Theseus and
Pirithous pledged to kidnap and marry daughters of
Zeus. Theseus chose
Helen and together they kidnapped her and decided to hold onto her until she was old enough to marry. Pirithous chose
Persephone. They left Helen with Theseus's mother,
Aethra, and traveled to the underworld. Hades knew of their plan to capture his wife, so he pretended to offer them hospitality and set a feast; as soon as the pair sat down, snakes coiled around their feet and held them there. Theseus was eventually rescued by
Heracles but Pirithous was either trapped as punishment for daring to seek the wife of a god for his own or killed by Cerberus, depending on the version of the story. , 350-325 BC
Sisyphus was a mortal king from
Corinth who was punished in
Tartarus for revealing to the
river god Asopus the whereabouts of his daughter
Aegina after
Zeus abducted her, and for trying to cheat
death as well. Zeus, angry at Sisyphus for revealing the secret, sent
Thanatos to Sisyphus, but he cleverly cast Death into his own bonds, and as a result no one could die until
Ares freed Thanatos and delivered Sisyphus to him. But still, Sisyphus ordered his wife
Merope not to perform any funeral rites for him and what else was accustomed as tribute to the
underworld gods before he was brought to Hades. After some time that Merope had not offered proper honours, Hades learnt of this, and allowed Sisyphus to return to the world of the living so that he could punish his wife, with the understanding that he would return afterwards. Sisyphus, however, never returned as promised until years later, when he died of old age. Hades punished Sisyphus by making him roll a boulder up a hill in the underworld; but every time he reached the top, the boulder would roll down again and again. In another version, it is Persephone who lets him out.
Heracles's final labour was to capture Cerberus. First, Heracles went to
Eleusis to be initiated into the
Eleusinian Mysteries. He did this to absolve himself of guilt for killing the
centaurs and to learn how to enter and exit the underworld alive. He found the entrance to the underworld at
Taenarum.
Athena and
Hermes helped him through and back from Hades. Heracles asked Hades for permission to take Cerberus. Hades agreed as long as Heracles did not harm Cerberus. When Heracles dragged the dog out of Hades, he passed through the cavern
Acherusia. In the myth of
Admetus and
Alcestis, after Alcestis chose to die in place of her husband
Admetus in order to save him,
Heracles brought her back from the dead by fighting and defeating Hades. In other versions, like
Euripides's play
Alcestis, Heracles fought
Thanatos instead. At another time,
Heracles sieged the town of
Pylos and during the fight he wounded Hades, who had sided with the Pylians. In great pain, Hades went to
Olympus to be healed by the physician of the gods,
Paean.
Lovers and children Leuce was the most beautiful of the nymphs and a daughter of
Oceanus. Hades fell in love with her and abducted her to the underworld. She lived out the span of her life in his realm, and when she died, the god sought consolation by creating a suitable memorial of their love: in the
Elysian Fields where the pious spend their afterlife, he brought a white tree into existence. It was this tree with which Heracles crowned himself to celebrate his
return from the underworld.
Minthe was a
nymph of the
river Cocytus who became Hades's mistress. A jealous
Persephone trampled the nymph under her foot, transforming her into
garden mint in the process. According to a scholiast on
Nicander, Hades turned his dead lover into the
mint herb after Persephone tore her into pieces for sleeping with him. In another version, Hades had kept Minthe as his mistress before he married Persephone, and set her aside afterwards. Minthe boasted of being more beautiful than Persephone, and that Hades would soon take her back. In anger over the
hubris directed toward her daughter,
Demeter trampled Minthe and turned her into mint. According to a 2nd–1st-century BC funerary epigram from
Pantikapaion (in modern-day
Crimea), Hades abducted the beautiful girl Theophile, with whom he had become enamoured. In a fragment of a lost play by the 5th-century BC tragedian
Aeschylus,
Zagreus is the son of Hades. The 2nd- or 3rd-century AD
Orphic Hymns describe Hades as the father of the
Eumenides by Persephone, a parentage also attested in two fragments of
Orphic literature (that is, lost works attributed to the mythical poet
Orpheus). In the
Suda, a 10th-century AD Byzantine encyclopaedia, Hades is the father of a figure named
Macaria.
Other works ,
Greece. Once, when a plague hit
Aonia, a region in
Boeotia, the people consulted an oracle, and the
god replied to them that they needed to make an appeal to the gods of the Underworld and sacrifice two willing young maidens to appease the anger of Hades and Persephone. The girls that were chosen were
Menippe and Metioche, the daughters of
Orion, who solemnly offered their lives in order to save their countrymen. After invoking the chthonic deities three times, they took their own lives with the shuttles of their looms. Hades and Persephone then took pity in both of them, and transformed their corpses into
comets. In some versions Hades is considered the master of the goddesses of
Fate, not his brother Zeus and the god who designates the end and origin of all things and orders the alternation of birth and destruction, the arbiter of life and death. This relationship is very clear in Roman epics like
Statius's
Thebaid, where they are mentioned taking souls to be judged by Hades and inflicting severe punishments or in
Claudian's
De raptu Proserpinae where they appear begging their master not to release the
Titans and saying everything they do is for him, after Hades threatens Zeus to release the Titans against him if he does not give him a wife. Hades is considered the father of the
Furies in some versions, but the mother's identity varies. in
Virgil's
Aeneid their mother is the night goddess
Nyx and in the
Orphic Hymns their mother is Persephone by Hades. One of the rare occasions when he appears interacting with them is in
Statius's
Thebaid, when Hades orders Tisiphone to punish humans for having invaded the
underworld. He is said to hate
Alecto, even though she is one of his children. In contrast to many of his other classical representations the satirical author
Lucian of
Samosata presents Hades in a more positive and even comic way. In his
Dialogues of the Dead, he is represented trying to solve problems of some famous mythological figures and one of the most outstanding dialogues is with
Protesilaus, one of the Greek heroes killed in the
Trojan War. In this conversation Protesilaus asks him to be reunited with his (still living) lover, and brings up as example that Hades did the same for
Admetus and
Alcestis,
Orpheus and
Eurydice, and that he himself also knows what being in love is like. Hades is skeptical, but Persephone manages to persuade him. According to
Hesiod, when the monstrous
Typhon attacked the Olympian gods, Hades is said to have trembled in fear in the underworld while
Zeus fought Typhon above. In one of
Plato's dialogues, Socrates talks about Hades as a figure capable of making everyone fall by his enchantments and that is why no one ever leaves the underworld, including the sirens. ==Cult and epithets==