|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Odysseus came to the Underworld in order to meet the seer Tiresias and learn about the outcome of his wanderings. It was the witch Circe who gave Odysseus this task, and the instructions as to how to do it. She also sent the wind who carried Odysseus' ship to the farthest realm of Oceanus, allowing him and his crew to find the Grove of Persephone that Circe had indicated. Circe instructed Odysseus to go to a rock which is located in the place where the rivers Pyriphlegethon (or Phlegethon) and Cocytus flow into Acheron. In that place Odysseus dug a pit around which he poured a libation to all the dead, first with honey and milk, then with wine, and finally with water. Then, having sprinkled white barley over the libation, he invocated the spirits of the dead, and after the invocation he cut the throats of a ram and an ewe. Then the souls of the dead came gathering about the pit. The souls that Odysseus met when he descended to Hades:
But Achilles replied:
And after that salutation, Odysseus told him what had happened in Troy after Achilles' death. |
|
|
And the soul of the man who had always taken women through violence dared to add:
|
|
|
But Ajax 1 left without a word. |
|
|
Alcmena, mother of Heracles 1. |
|
|
Anticlia 1. Odysseus was stirred to compassion when he saw his mother's soul, for she was still alive when he left Ithaca. And yet Odysseus did not allow the soul of his own mother to approach the sacrificial blood before he had talked to Tiresias. But later, when she was allowed to approach, she told him news about his father Laertes, who lived the life of a recluse and yearned for his return home. Likewise she told him that the cause of her own death had been her heartache for him. Odysseus tried to embrace her, but the ghost slipped through his arms, and as he cried to his mother in despair she explained:
|
|
|
Antilochus. Son of Nestor and leader of the Pylians against Troy. He was killed in the war by Hector 1, or by Memnon. |
|
|
Antiope 3. Mother of Amphion 1 and Zethus. |
|
|
|
|
|
Chloris 1, who survived the killing of the NIOBIDS, and having married Neleus, became queen of Pylos. She is the mother of Nestor. |
|
|
Elpenor was one of Odysseus' companions. He fell from the roof of Circe's house and broke his neck. As he had been left behind unburied, he now asked Odysseus to bury him on his return to the island of Aeaea. |
|
|
Eriphyle. The story of hateful Eriphyle is at Robe & Necklace of Harmonia 1. |
|
|
|
|
|
Iphimedia. Mother of the ALOADS, who had the ambition of piling Mount Ossa on Olympus, and Mount Pelion on Ossa, and in that way reach up to heaven (see Zeus, for their attack against his rule). |
|
|
Jocasta, also called Epicasta 3, is mother and wife of Oedipus. She hanged herself obsessed by the idea of having married her own son. |
|
|
|
|
| Maera 3. | |
|
Megara, Heracles 1's wife. |
|
|
|
|
|
Odysseus saw Orion driving together over the field of asphodel wild beasts which he had slain, holding in his hands a club of bronze that could not be broken. |
|
| Patroclus 1. | |
|
|
|
|
Odysseus saw him being punished by rolling a stone with his hands and head in an effort to heave it over the top of a hill, but as he pushes it to the top it rebounds backward. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tityus. Odysseus saw this son of Gaia being punished in the Underworld for having attacked Leto, mother of Apollo and Artemis. There a pair of vultures eat his liver and he is powerless to drive them off. |
|
Aeneas descended to the Underworld, guided by the Sibyl, through a cave in Cumae (Italy). After having passed the entrance where Grief, Anxiety, Diseases, Old Age, Fear, Hunger, Death, Agony, Hypnos, and other creatures dwell, he came to the Elm from which False Dreams cling. Next he followed the road to the river Acheron where he saw the souls of the unburied whom Charon refused to take to the other side. Charon accepted to ferry Aeneas when he saw the Golden Bough that Aeneas was carrying. On the other bank, they first met the hound Cerberus 1, whom the Sibyl put to sleep with a cake of honey and wheat infused with sedative drugs. In the fields behind the cave of Cerberus 1, Aeneas saw those who died in childhood, those who had been condemned to death on a false charge, and those who killed themselves. Next he came to the Vale of Mourning where those who were consumed by unhappy love dwell, and in the farthest fields, before the dividing road, he saw those who were famous in war. Then Aeneas came to the place where the road forks, the left hand leading to Tartarus, and the right, beneath the Palace of Hades to Elysium. In the entrance of the Palace, Aeneas put down his passport, the Golden Bough, and then he proceeded to Elysium, where he met his father Anchises 1, saw souls who were not yet born, and other souls drinking from the waters of the river Lethe (Oblivion) before they were reborn. The souls of those that Aeneas met in the Underworld: Adrastus 1, King of Argos who raised the army of the SEVEN AGAINST THEBES.
Caeneus 1. Once a woman called Caenis, she was turned into an invulnerable man by Poseidon. Capys 2. Future King of Alba. Deiphobus 1, son of Priam 1 who married Helen after Paris' death, and was himself killed by Menelaus at the end of the Trojan War.
Eriphyle. For the story of this woman see Robe & Necklace of Harmonia 1. Glaucus 6. A Trojan, son of Antenor 1. Idaeus 1. A Trojan herald during the war. Leucaspis 2. One of Aeneas' companions, lost in shipwreck. Medon 4, son of Antenor 1, killed by Philoctetes at Troy. Musaeus. A famous bard, perhaps son of Orpheus. Numitor 2. Son of Proca, brother of Amulius and grandfather of Romulus and Remus 1, the founders of Rome. Orontes 1. One of Aeneas' companions, lost in shipwreck. Palinurus. The steersman of the exiled Aeneas, during the latter's trip from Troy to Latium. On approaching Italy Palinurus fell asleep and was hurled into the sea, and apparently he swam to the coast where he was killed by the locals. A harbour Palinurus in Italy was named after him. Palinurus had a brother, Iapis, who received from Apollo the gifts of music and divination, and certainly he was also a healer, because he is reported to have applied, on one occasion, curative herbs to Aeneas' wound. Parthenopaeus. One of the SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. He was killed in that war. Pasiphae. Queen of Crete. Daedalus constructed a hollowed wooden cow on wheels for Pasiphae so that she could couple with a bull (see Daedalus and Minotaur).
Polyphoetes. A priest of Demeter at Troy. Proca Silvius. King of Alba and Latium. Succeeded his father Aventinus 2. At his death, his younger son Amulius seized the kingship by violence. His other son was Numitor 2.
Silvius Aeneas, son of Silvius (see also Aeneas). Silvius, son of Aeneas and Lavinia 2. Succeeded Ascanius 2 on the throne of the Alban and Latin state. Silvius was father of Latinus 2, and of Silvius Aeneas. Sychaeus. First husband of Dido. Thersilochus 1. Son of Antenor 1, killed by Achilles during the Trojan War. Tydeus 2. Father of Diomedes 2 and one of the SEVEN AGAINST THEBES. Tydeus 2 was killed in that war by Melanippus 1. |
The three-headed dog
At the Eleusinian Mysteries In any case, to accomplish this task, which is one of his LABOURS, Heracles 1 thought it convenient to be initiated in the mysteries at Eleusis, so that he should be prepared and understand better the world he was about to set his foot upon. However, since it was not lawful at the time for a foreigner to be initiated, he became the adoptive son of Pylius, otherwise an unknown man. And since he still was polluted because of the slaying of the CENTAURS, he was purified, before his initiation, by Eumolpus 1, son of Poseidon and Chione 1, daughter of Boreas 1, one of the WINDS. At the time, Orpheus' son Musaeus was in charge of the initiatory rites of the Eleusinian Mysteries, a man who could fly, since Boreas 1 had taught him how, and who having been trained by Apollo and the MUSES, wrote poems and songs. Descends somewhere Having been initiated, Heracles 1 came to Laconia in southern Greece where an entrance to the Underworld could be found at Taenarum. Yet others have said that he entered the Underworld in a place at the Acherusian Chersonese on the Black Sea.
Heracles 1 not only found dead souls; for he also met Theseus and his accomplice Pirithous. The latter had come to the realm of shadows, also through the entrance at Taenarum, having in mind the bizarre idea of marrying Persephone. On account of this great insolence, they were both bound fast in the Underworld before they were dead, and when they saw Heracles 1, they, wishing to be raised from the dead, stretched out their hands towards him. Some have said that Heracles 1 rescued both, but others assert that he could only raise Theseus; for when he wished to save Pirithous the earth quaked, and he desisted. Still others affirm that neither of them ever returned.
Ascalaphus 2 Heracles 1, who often protected those in need, also rolled away the stone of Ascalaphus 2, the son of the river god Acheron. Ascalaphus 2 bore witness against Persephone, confirming that she had eaten the seed or seeds of pomegranate that Hades had given her, not knowing that for doing so she would be bound to the Underworld. For giving that testimony, Demeter laid the heavy rock on him in Hades, which Heracles 1 rolled away. Yet, when Ascalaphus 2 was free again, Demeter turned him into a short-eared owl. Herdsman Menoetes 1, again Heracles 1 wished to provide the thirsty souls with blood, and for that purpose he dared to slaughter one beast of the cattle of Hades. But the herdsman Menoetes 1, the same who had exposed him when he had come to fetch the Cattle of Geryon (see LABOURS) challenged Heracles 1 to wrestle, which resulted in Menoetes 1 having his ribs broken when Heracles 1 seized him round the middle. Captures the dog After these minor incidents, Heracles 1 asked Hades for Cerberus 1, and the god replied that he could take it if he could master it without weapons. So finding the three-headed hound at the gates of the river Acheron, he grasped it without relaxing his grip, and although the dragon in Cerberus 1's tail bit him, he at last gained control over the brute. Yet it is also told that Heracles 1 received Cerberus 1 in chains by the favour of Persephone, who had welcomed him, as some say, like a brother. Return to the upper world It is uncertain whether Heracles 1 returned to this world through the exit at Troezen, through that at Hermione (the city facing the island of Hydra in eastern Argolis), or through the exit at Mount Laphystius in Boeotia. In any case, Heracles 1 came with the hound to Mycenae, and after showing it to Eurystheus, he carried it back to the Underworld. |
|||||||
|
Sources
Abbreviations
|
|
||||||||||
|
|
|
|
Biographies | GROUPS | Places & Peoples | Dictionary | Images | Albums | Topics | Search | Downloads This page belongs to the Greek Mythology Link, a web site created and maintained by Carlos Parada. Except stated otherwise, the material in this site is copyright © Carlos Parada & Maicar Förlag 1997. About, Additions, Backups, Yahoo Group, Addresses, Contact. |