Leo
the Lion
The first of Hercules' historic Twelve Labours
was to bring to King Eurystheus the skin of an invulnerable
lion which roamed the land of Argolis, terrorizing the hills
around Nemea. The birthright of this Nemean Lion varies
according to which particular myth is consulted. According
to some sources, this enormous and extremely ferocious beast
was the offspring of a liaison between the 100-headed monster
known as the Typhon and the half-maiden/half serpent called
Echinda. Other sources state that the Nemean Lion fell to
Earth from the Moon and was the offspring of Zeus (King
of the Gods) and Selene (Goddess of the Moon). It is also
suggested that Selene deliberately let the beast loose on
the population of Nemea in Argolis because they did not
pay her due homage. In addition, the Nemean Lion is credited
with being the brother of the Theban Sphinx.
Regardless, Hercules began his first labour...a
seemingly impossible task...by traveling to a town called
Cleonae, where he stayed at the house of an impoverished
workman-for-hire whose name was Molorchus.
When Molorchus offered to sacrifice an animal
in order to ensure a safe lion hunt, Hercules asked the
workman to wait thirty days. Then, if the hero returned
with the lion's skin, a sacrifice would be made to Zeus.
However, if Hercules perished during the course of his quest,
Molorchus agreed to make the sacrifice instead in honour
of the deceased hero. Upon reaching Nemea, Hercules began
to track the terrible lion. However, he soon discovered
that arrows were useless against the creature. Picking up
his club, Hercules followed the lion to a cave which had
two entrances. Blocking one of the doorways, the hero approached
the fierce lion through the other. Then, grasping the beast
within his mighty arms and ignoring its powerful claws,
Hercules held the lion tightly until he had choked it to
death.
Returning to Cleonae carrying the dead lion,
Hercules reunited with Molorchus on the thirtieth day after
his departure. Thus, instead of sacrificing to a deceased
hero, Molorchus and Hercules were able to make a sacrificial
offering together to the King of the Gods. When Hercules
arrived back in Mycenea, Eurystheus was so amazed that the
hero had managed to achieve such an impossible task that
he grew fearful of Hercules and forbade him from entering
through the gates of the City. Further, the King of Mycenea
ordered that a large bronze jar be fashioned and buried
partway in the ground, where he could hide from Hercules
if the need arose. After that, Eurystheus communicated his
commands regarding the future labours of Hercules through
a herald, refusing to meet the intrepid hero face-to-face.
According to some versions of the tale,
once the huge lion was dead, Hercules set about skinning
the beast, but the hide was so tough that he could neither
tear nor cut it. Then, he tried the enormous claws which
were very sharp and managed to penetrate the skin, whereupon
Hercules claimed his trophy. Realizing how impenetrable
this pelt would be, he threw it over himself in the form
of a cloak and, pulling the head over his own as a helmet,
created from the hide an armor which would make this hero
even more powerful than before...symbolically adopting the
attributes of the lion to complete his remaing tasks. An
alternative to the story of how the Nemean Lion was skinned
states that Athene, in the guise of an ancient crone, eventually
helped Hercules to realize that the best tool to cut the
hide would be the beast's very own claws.
Hercules is often depicted on ancient Greek
vase paintings or in sculptures wearing the skin of a lion...its
jaws forming the peak of a helmet while the great clawed
paws are knotted at the hero's chest, the whole forming
a hooded cape. However, historians have traditionally disagreed
as to whether the skin Hercules is portrayed wearing in
such works of art is that of the Nemean Lion or that of
different lion entirely...one which Hercules is said to
have killed when he was eighteen years old. Indeed, the
playwright Euripides wrote that Hercules' lion skin garb
actually came from the Grove of Zeus, also known as the
Sanctury at Nemea.
Later, it is said that it was Zeus who hung
the lion's likeness in the heavens. There, the creature
slain by Hercules spends much time snoozing in his den.
Despite his fangs, he is perceived as a friendly and affectionate
beast...a loving father to his cubs and most protective
of his lioness. |