Hermes
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According
to Greek mythology, Zeus ordered his messenger,
Hermes, to slay Argus. In this painting by Ubaldo
Gandolfi, Hermes has lulled Argus to sleep prior
to beheading him. This work belongs to the North
Carolina Museum of Art.
Microsoft®
Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
North
Carolina Museum of Art/CORBIS-BETTMANN
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Hermes
by Ron Leadbetter
Hermes,
the herald of the Olympian gods, is son of Zeus
and the nymph Maia, daughter
of Atlas and one of the Pleiades.
Hermes
is also the god of shepherds, land travel, merchants, weights
and measures, oratory, literature, athletics and thieves,
and known for his cunning and shrewdness. He was also a
minor patron of poetry.
He
was worshiped throughout Greece especially in Arcadia. Festivals
in honor of Hermes were called Hermoea.
According
to legend, Hermes was born in a cave on Mount Cyllene in
Arcadia. Zeus had impregnated Maia at the dead of night
while all other gods slept. When dawn broke amazingly he
was born. Maia wrapped him in swaddling bands, then resting
herself, fell fast asleep.
Hermes,
however, squirmed free and ran off to Thessaly. This is
where Apollo, his brother, grazed his cattle. Hermes stole
a number of the herd and drove them back to Greece. He hid
them in a small grotto near to the city of Pylos and covered
their tracks.
Before
returning to the cave he caught a tortoise, killed it and
removed its entrails. Using the intestines from a cow stolen
from Apollo and the hollow tortoise shell, he made the first
lyre.
When
he reached the cave he wrapped himself back into the swaddling
bands. When Apollo realized he had been robbed he protested
to Maia that it had been Hermes who had taken his cattle.
Maia
looked to Hermes and said it could not be, as he is still
wrapped in swaddling bands.
Zeus
the all powerful intervened saying he had been watching
and Hermes should return the cattle to Apollo.
As
the argument went on, Hermes began to play his lyre. The
sweet music enchanted Apollo, and he offered Hermes to keep
the cattle in exchange for the lyre.
Apollo
later became the grand master of the instrument, and it
also became one of his symbols.
Later
while Hermes watched over his herd he invented the pipes
known as a syrinx (pan-pipes), which he made from reeds.
Hermes was also credited with inventing the flute.
Apollo,
also desired this instrument, so Hermes bartered with Apollo
and received his golden wand which Hermes later used as
his heralds staff. (In other versions Zeus gave Hermes his
heralds staff).
Being
the herald (messenger of the gods), it was his duty to guide
the souls of the dead down to the underworld, which is known
as a psychopomp. He was also closely connected with bringing
dreams to mortals.
Hermes
is usually depicted with a broad-brimmed hat or a winged
cap, winged sandals and the heralds staff (kerykeion in
Greek, or Caduceus in Latin). It was often shown as a shaft
with two white ribbons, although later they were represented
by serpents intertwined in a figure of eight shape, and
the shaft often had wings attached. The clothes he donned
were usually that of a traveler, or that of a workman or
shepherd.
Other
symbols of Hermes are the cock, tortoise and purse or pouch.
Originally
Hermes was a phallic god, being attached to fertility and
good fortune, and also a patron of roads and boundaries.
His name coming from herma, the plural being hermai< herm
was a square or rectangular pillar in either stone or bronze,
with the head of Hermes (usually with a beard), which adorned
the top of the pillar, and male genitals near to the base
of the pillar. These were used for road and boundary markers.
Also in Athens they stood outside houses to help fend off
evil.
In
Athens of 415 BC, shortly before the Athenian fleet set
sail against Syracuse (during the Peloponnesian War), all
the herms throughout Athens were defaced. This was attributed
to people who were against the war. Their intentions were
to cast bad omens on the expedition, by seeking to offend
the god of travel. (This has never been proved as the true
reason for the mutilation of the herms.)
The
offspring of Hermes are believed to be Pan,
Abderus and Hermaphroditus.
Hermes
as with the other gods had numerous affairs with goddesses,
nymphs and mortals. In some legends even sheep and goats.
Pan,
the half man half goat, is believed to be the son of Hermes
and Dryope, the daughter of king Dryops. Pan terrified his
mother when he was born, so much so that she fled in horror
at the sight of her new born son. Hermes took Pan to Mount
Olympus were the gods reveled in his laughter and his appearance
and became the patron of fields, woods, shepherds and flocks.
Abderus,
a companion of the hero Heracles, is also thought to be
a son of Hermes, he was devoured by the Mares
of Diomedes, after Heracles had left him in charge of the
ferocious beasts.
Hermaphroditus
(also known as Aphroditus) was conceived after the union
of Hermes and Aphrodite. He was born on Mount Ida but he
was raised by the Naiads (nymphs
of freshwater). He was a androgynous (having the characteristics
of both sexes) deity, depicted as either a handsome young
man but with female breasts, or as Aphrodite with male genitals.
It was Hermes who liberated Io, the lover of Zeus, from
the hundred-eyed giant Argus, who had been ordered by Hera,
the jealous wife of Zeus, to watch over her. Hermes charmed
the giant with his flute, and while Argos slept Hermes cut
off his head and released Io.
Hera,
as a gesture of thanks to her loyal servant, scattered the
hundred eyes of Argos over the tail of a peacock (Heras'
sacred bird).
Hermes
also used his ingenuity and abilities to persuade the nymph
Calypso to release Odysseus, the wandering hero, from her
charms. She had kept Odysseus captive, after he was shipwrecked
on her island Ogygia, promising him immortality if he married
her, but Zeus sent Hermes to release Odysseus. Legend says
that Calypso died of grief when Odysseus sailed away.
Hermes
also saved Odysseus and his men from being transformed into
pigs by the goddess and sorceress Circe. He gave them a
herb which resisted the spell.
Hermes
also guided Eurydice back down to the underworld after she
had been allowed to stay for one day on earth with her husband
Orpheus.
Known
for his swiftness and athleticism, Hermes was given credit
for inventing foot-racing and boxing. At Olympia a statue
of him stood at the entrance to the stadium and his statues
where in every gymnasium throughout Greece.
Apart
from herms, Hermes was a popular subject for artists. Both
painted pottery and statuary show him in various forms,
but the most fashionable depicted him as a good-looking
young man, with an athletic body, and winged sandals and
his heralds staff.
His
Roman counterpart Mercury inherited his attributes, and
there are many Roman copies of Greek artistic creations
of Hermes.