Jumping spider, Hyllus sp., with huntsmans prey
Photographed in Malaysia by Nicky Bay // Website // Facebook
Shared with permission; do not remove credit or re-post!
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Jumping spider, Hyllus sp., with huntsmans prey
Photographed in Malaysia by Nicky Bay // Website // Facebook
Shared with permission; do not remove credit or re-post!
“my blood’s forever on your hands. when my ghost sings my battle cry, you’ll be too sorry to dance.”
God I love the REALLY messy but beautiful and fucked up but fixable relationships in the greek mythology
Hyllus and Iole Megara and Iolaus andromache and helenus
lot of iol
Thinking about Sthenelus, Perseus’s son.
So the way Sthenelus taking the throne here is framed as opportunistic since he exiles Amphitryon who also had a claim to the throne and while I don’t doubt that could be part of the motivation… he technically didn’t do anything wrong, even tho it was an accident Amphitryon still killed Electryon and it’s the law that he’d be exiled for the crime (just like Perseus exiled himself from Argos for killing Acrisius). There’s no indication that Sthenelus tried to harm or sabotage Amphitryon or his family either. But we do know that his son Eurystheus was very different and tried to kill Heracles/Amphitryon’s family.
We don’t see any indication of Sthenelus condemning let alone criticizing his son for his poor treatment of Heracles, who was his own kin and grandchild of his brother whom he supposedly honored by exiling his (accidental) killer. We espec don’t see him do anything to stop Eurystheus from harming Heracles family.
So I can see why it’s Hyllus killed him:
Even if Sthenelus didn’t say or do anything to harm the Heracles’s family he was still complicit in their suffering and did nothing. For angst reasons I like to think Hyllus looked like Perseus, so it seems to (the probably senile and elderly) Sthenelus like his father’s spirit is angry with at him for abandoning his family for the sake of power.
I just saw the post about Heracles' children. It's a lot more like a soap opera than I thought and he owes a lot of child support 😂. How did he become a monster lover (have three sons with a monster) and was it awkward that Hyllus was forced to marry Iole ☕👀 ?
Hahaha well Heracles has arguably countless affairs and later on at later sources we see him have affairs indeed with both men and women. One of the most prominent and named ones is also his nephew Iolaus, son of his twin half-brother Iphicles. His erotic adventures seem to have no end and no real filter given how he did basically everything from....roleplay till as you said monster lover haha (I remind you how for yet another murder he was sold a slave to Omphale and according to some versions he performed several tasks for her such as fighting off threats and the like however he also spent his time in her palace dressed up as a woman, doing female tasks for her while she wore his lion mane and held his club so essentially one of the first sexual roleplays in literature history haha)
Well can't tell for sure given how Iole was also known to be very beautiful and young so if anything the match was more suitable for Hyllus. I mean Heracles married his nephew (and daresay lover) to his ex-wife Megara and the reason behind it was interestingly so that he would encourage people not to be afraid to take older wives and they also give us the age marks of theirs (Iolaus was 16 while Megara was 33) so I think Hyllus marring a young bride that his father COULD have married (and it wasn't even a fixed deal given the whole mess that followed) seems like the least awkward pairing hahaha and to be fair whether the union was totally forced upon them or not is unclear but it seems an arranged business. Was Iole disappointed that she wasn't given to great Heracles but settled for his son? Was she relieved? Was she equally displeased? Who knows? Was Hyllus feeling awkward or worried or sad to marry in an arranged marriage? Possible but it is not always clearly stated.
Oh and Iolaus was forever faithful to Heracles and devoted. According to some myths after Heracles's wish, he took some of his sons with the 50 daughters of Thespes and went to Spain to form a settlement there and spread the hellenic culture in the name of Heracles. And of course let's not forget the play "Heracleide" in which Iolaus, old man now, tried his best to protect some of the children of Heracles from the wrath of Eurystheus by seeking sanctuary to the temple. He even rushed to battle despite his age (and according to the play, he was given back his youth by the gods to fight the war)
As for how he became Echidna's lover that was also commented by me at this post hahahaha
💬 6 🔁 0 ❤️ 11 · You know...the fact that people interpret that "snake deity" that Heracles mated with at some point as "Echidna" is not ta
I mean he was literally wearing one of her children as armor for goodness sakes hahahaha honestly what a guy hahaha both affectionate and derogatory hahahahaha
Hercules carrying his son Hyllus looks at the centaur Nessus, who is about to carry Deianira across the river on his back, 1st century AD Naples National Archaeological Museum
why are you so dynamically posed. and huge
Theseus and the Heraclids (children of Heracles)
Now after the deification of Heracles his sons made their home in Trachis at the court of Ceÿx the king. But later, when Hyllus and some of the others had attained to manhood, Eurystheus, being afraid lest, after they had all come of age, he might be driven from his kingdom at Mycenae, decided to send the Heracleidae into exile from the whole of Greece. Consequently he served notice upon Ceÿx, the king, to banish both the Heracleidae and the sons of Licymnius, and Iolaüs as well and the band of Arcadians who had served with Heracles on his campaigns, adding that, if he should fail to do these things, he must submit to war. But the Heracleidae and their friends, perceiving that they were of themselves not sufficient in number to carry on a war against Eurystheus, decided to leave Trachis of their own free will, and going about among the most important of the other cities they asked them to receive them as fellow-townsmen. When no other city had the courage to take them in, the Athenians alone of all, such being their inborn sense of justice, extended a welcome to the sons of Heracles, and they settled them and their companions in the flight in the city of Tricorythus, which is one of the cities of what is called the Tetrapolis. And after some time, when all the sons of Heracles had attained to manhood and a spirit of pride sprang up in the young men because of the glory of descent from Heracles, Eurystheus, viewing with suspicion their growing power, came up against them with a great army. But the Heracleidae, who had the aid of the Athenians, chose as their leader Iolaüs, the nephew of Heracles, and after entrusting to him and Theseus and Hyllus the direction of the war, they defeated Eurystheus in a pitched battle. In the course of the battle the larger part of the army of Eurystheus was slain and Eurystheus himself, when his chariot was wrecked in the flight, was killed by Hyllus, the son of Heracles; likewise the sons of Eurystheus perished in the battle to a man
Diodorus Siculus Book 4.57.2