ebook img

Herakles and Hercules: Exploring a Graeco-Roman Divinity PDF

265 Pages·2005·10.372 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Herakles and Hercules: Exploring a Graeco-Roman Divinity

Herakles and Hercules HERAKLES and HERCULES Exploring A Graeco-Roman Divinity Editors Louis Rawlings and Hugh Bowden Contributors Hugh Bowden, Guy Bradley, Susan Deacy, Olivier Hekster, Michael Jameson, Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones, Ann M. Nicgorski, Eleanor Regina OKell, Louis Rawlings, Roger Rees, Emma Stafford The Classical Press of Wales First published in 2005 by The classical Press of Wales 15 rosehill Terrace, swansea sa1 6Jn Tel: +44 (0)1792 458397 Fax: +44 (0)1792 464067 www.classicalpressofwales.co.uk distributor in the united states of america: The david Brown Book co. PO Box 511, Oakville, cT 06779 Tel: +1 (860) 945–9329 Fax: +1 (860) 945–9468 © 2005 The contributors all rights reserved. no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo- copying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. IsBn 1–905125–05-4 a catalogue record for this book is available from the British library Typeset by ernest Buckley, clunton, shropshire Printed and bound in the uk by Gomer Press, llandysul, ceredigion, Wales The Classical Press of Wales, an independent venture, was founded in 1993, initially to support the work of classicists and ancient historians in Wales and their collaborators from further afield. More recently it has published work initiated by scholars internationally . While retaining a special loyalty to Wales and the Celtic countries, the Press welcomes scholarly contributions from all parts of the world. The symbol of the Press is the red kite. This bird, once widespread in Britain, was reduced by 1905 to some five individuals confined to a small area known as ‘The desert of Wales’ – the upper Tywi valley. Geneticists report that the stock was saved from terminal inbreeding by the arrival of one stray female bird from Germany. after much careful protection, the red kite now thrives – in Wales and beyond. cOnTenTs Page Introduction Hugh Bowden and Louis Rawlings vii Part I. Herakles 1. Herakles, Herodotos and the Persian Wars 1 Hugh Bowden (king’s college, london) 2. The family of Herakles in attika 15 † Michael Jameson (stanford university) 3. Herakles and his ‘girl’: athena, heroism and beyond 37 Susan Deacy (roehampton university) 4. Herakles re-dressed: gender, clothing and the construction of a Greek hero 51 Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones (university of edinburgh) 5. Vice or virtue? Herakles and the art of allegory 71 Emma Stafford (university of leeds) 6. The magic knot of Herakles, the propaganda of alexander the Great and Tomb II at Vergina 97 Ann M. Nicgorski (Willamette university, Oregon) Part II. Hercules 7. aspects of the cult of Hercules in central Italy 129 Guy Bradley (cardiff university) 8. Hannibal and Hercules 153 Louis Rawlings (cardiff university) v Contents 9. Hercules Furens and nero: the didactic purpose of senecan tragedy 185 Eleanor Regina OKell (nottingham) 10. Propagating power: Hercules as an example for second-century emperors 205 Olivier Hekster (radboud university, nijmegen) 11. The emperors’ new names: diocletian Jovius and Maximian Herculius 223 Roger Rees (university of edinburgh) Index 241 vi InTrOducTIOn Hugh Bowden and Louis Rawlings This collection had its origins in a conference on Herakles-Hercules in the Ancient World, held at the university of cardiff in september 1998. The contributors are a group of scholars whose research does not focus primarily on the figure of Herakles (or Hercules), but who have found that the hero (or god) cannot be ignored in their work. The papers cover a wide chronological span and a wide geographical area, reflecting the ubiquity of Herakles-Hercules in the Mediterranean world from an early period, and the enduring power of the myths and ideas associated with him. To paint the background to the chapters we need to start by going back to the eighth century bc, with the beginnings of settlement throughout the Mediterranean by Phoenicians and Greeks. The Phoenicians took with them the cult of the god Melqart from Tyre, and temples were estab- lished as far west as cadiz.1 at the same time, Greek settlers were creating communities in southern Italy and sicily, and it is clear that there was considerable intercourse between Greeks and Phoenicians, demonstrable for example in what appears to be a common settlement at Pithekoussai, and most famously in the adoption of a version of the Phoenician alphabet for writing Greek.2 By way of the Greeks the alphabet was then adopted in Italy. Melqart was identified by the Greeks with Herakles. Herodotos describes the temple at Tyre, which he claims to be a temple of Herakles (2.43–4, quoted in chapter 1). already in the archaic period stories about Herakles had him travelling across the whole Mediterranean basin: his search for the apples of the Hesperides and his theft of the cattle of Geryon are both associated with the far west.3 Whether it was the presence of cult-sites of Melqart that led to Greek stories locating Herakles there, or whether the stories about Herakles aided the identification with Melqart, is less important than the fact that from an early period the figure of Herakles was recognized as having an importance beyond the world of the Greeks.4 Wherever Greeks and Phoenicians travelled or settled, indigenous divinities also became identified with Herakles and Melqart. In Italy, for instance, Hercules’ presence can be detected in the early religion of rome and the etruscan cities but, as Bradley argues, we have to be very careful when vii Introduction trying to establish what Herakles-Hercules might have meant to people in such communities, or in less urbanized areas like umbria and samnium. His paper nevertheless shows that Hercules was an important recipient of cult in Italy from at least the sixth century bc. In later centuries, as rawlings shows, the figure of Melqart-Herakles-Hercules could be used by more than one side in conflicts within the Mediterranean: both Hannibal Barca and scipio africanus were seen as his protégés, and Hannibal in particular, moving between the Punic, Hellenistic Greek and roman worlds, found him a figure that could be understood wherever he went. When Greek communities dealt with Herakles, they recognized him as someone who had once been part of their world, and in many ways still was. Jameson shows that, in attika, the cults of relatives and associates of Herakles were an acknowledgement of athenian involvement in his family’s history, and Bowden indicates how Herakles’ past actions and his present power could be understood by Herodotos and others to play a role in recent history. This kind of interpretation, as rawlings points out, could be rejected by some Greeks, such as Polybius, but it nevertheless remained popular with others, and with roman writers such as silius Italicus, who used it in his reading of the Hannibalic War. But Herakles-Hercules had a much wider range of meanings to the Greeks and romans. His labours, carried out while he was in servitude to eurystheus, are first mentioned in the Iliad (19.132–3). Thus from as far back as we can trace, Herakles was presented as a hero who had to endure hardship and injustice, and did so nobly.5 at the same time he could also be a dangerous and destructive figure (e.g. Hom. Il. 11.690–3; 14.250–1). How the athenians represented this complexity is the subject of deacy’s paper, and llewellyn-Jones’ paper is a warning against trying to read too much into some of these represen- tations. On the other hand, stafford explores ways in which the patient, suffering Herakles came to be used as a model for virtuous behaviour. His complicated character nevertheless made him an attractive figure ‘to think with’ for many different groups in a wide variety of religious, cultural and political contexts. His appearances on the athenian dramatic stage, in attic vase painting – much of which appears to have been exported to Italy – or his representation in the form of cheap lead figurines dedicated and deposited in appennine sanctuaries, or on the coinages of Greek and Italian communities, are testament to his cross-cultural popularity, accessibility, and malleability. The pivotal moment in the story of Herakles is the career of alexander the Great. For the first time we have a man who is willing to identify himself with the hero, and indeed to try to emulate and surpass his deeds.6 Quite how much the rivalry between alexander and Herakles viii Introduction is the creation of later historians rather than a part of alexander’s own mission is not clear, but it is certain that alexander did make considerable use of Heraklean iconography, the subject of nicgorski’s paper. In doing so, alexander created a pattern which subsequent rulers were happy to follow. Herakles was a traveller, a conqueror and a founder of cities, and all of these things alexander imitated. But as nicgorski also points out, he had other associations with more down-to-earth areas of life, not least agriculture, and these too were available to the monarch who styled himself after the hero. alexander’s association with Herakles was imitated by Hannibal, but it is with the roman emperors that we see the identification most thoroughly explored. Both ‘bad’ emperors like nero, domitian and commodus, and ‘good’ emperors like Trajan, Hadrian and antoninus Pius could find aspects of the hero to advertise. Okell shows how the virtuous stoic Hercules, the figure stafford explores, could be held up by seneca as a model for his charge, nero, while that emperor had other, perhaps more exciting, Herculeses to choose if he wished. Hekster suggests that for domitian and commodus, and certainly for their detractors, it was Hercules the slayer of wild beasts and lawless men that provided a role-model, while for Trajan and Hadrian, Hercules was a general and a traveller, not to mention a hero associated with Hadrian’s home province of Baetica.7 It was in a similar spirit in the third century ad that Postumus, in his breakaway Gallic empire, placed representations of Hercules and his labours on his coinage. rees discusses this development and then what might be seen as the final classical reinvention of Hercules. The adoption of the signum Herculius by Maximian, to accompany diocletian’s Jovius, was a way of symbolizing the relationship between the two augusti – Maximian was diocletian’s adoptive son and co-labourer in the task of bringing order to the world. But in the language of panegyric the distinction between emperor and hero is effectively elided away: Maximian is not simply imitating Hercules, he is Hercules. all the deeds of the hero celebrated over the previous thousand years are to be taken as belonging to Maximian himself. From the discussions in this volume it becomes clear that Herakles- Hercules was a figure who gave strength to a host of individuals and groups in antiquity. They constructed identities from their association with the hero and drew meaning from his mythical exploits. In turn they contributed greatly to the enrichment of his mythology and, above all, to the abiding appeal of this Greco-roman divinity. during the final stages of the preparation for publication, Michael Jameson passed away. This volume is respectfully dedicated to his memory. ix

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.