![]() He offered Atlas an opportunity that he could not resist what wouldn’t Atlas agree to, in order to unload his terrible burden for a short time? Hercules would hold up the sky while Atlas stole the apples. When Hercules was assigned his eleventh Labour and told to steal apples from the Garden of the Hesperides, it was only by utilising his semi-divine might to capture and bully the sea god Nereus that he learned how to reach the Garden, and only with the support of the sun god Helios, who lent Hercules his own enormous golden cup in which to sail across the sea, that he actually got there.Īnd once he did get there, Hercules was smart enough not to do his own dirty work. The apples also had the protection of a hundred-headed dragon, clearly Hera knew her family well enough to be prepared, but its best defence was the fact the Garden was so fiendishly difficult to find. ![]() ![]() The tree – or, depending on the version, grove – was a wedding gift from the earth goddess Gaia to the queen of the Pantheon, Hera. They were goddesses of the evening, which now that I type it sounds rather like a euphemism, and guardians of the Garden’s arboreal treasure: the golden apples of immortality. The sisters were Aegle, Erythraea and Hespera, all names that reference different stages of sunset. Contenders include Nyx, goddess of night, and Atlas, the Titan tasked with holding up the sky. As with many lesser gods in mythology, these nymphs are credited with a great many different parents. This month, we’re touring into Greek mythology to visit the Garden of the Hesperides, which was the perfect secluded getaway until the notorious hero Hercules got tasked with raiding the place.īefore we get to the garden, let’s start with the Hesperides themselves.
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