Transaction: 15656dd9372f683ee61d3b28b57fbff6e0c4f438

Included in block 16,254,323 at 2017/10/12 03:25:18 (UTC).

Transaction overview

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Transaction info
transaction_id 15656dd9372f683ee61d3b28b57fbff6e0c4f438
ref_block_num 1,389
block_num16,254,323
ref_block_prefix 2,792,196,483
expiration2017/10/12T03:26:09
transaction_num 24
extensions[]
signatures 20058107e1a5c65caab8d500a45f92fe363d7d31d2faa44ef8853b8097551c093b5c75800ab6ae9e98037cd39df570e262975bc5f0811927238b5c7faedc4f52bf
operations
comment
"parent_author":"",<br>"parent_permlink":"art",<br>"author":"hyacinthesin",<br>"permlink":"the-madness-of-herakles-calyx-krater-by-astea-circa-350-bce",<br>"title":"The Madness of Herakles,<br> calyx krater by Astea,<br> circa 350 BCE",<br>"body":"![42-p219-medium.jpg (https:\/\/steemitimages.com\/DQmctLDL7iuhLsuBhrQwxMyGd7fSSTtZQoD7rNRnZo2gCfb\/42-p219-medium.jpg)\n\nThe Madness of Herakles is an episode from Greek history with which many are unlikely familiat. In the West,<br> Hercules is more often seen in his red-haired,<br> Disneyfied form: coming to age under the tutelage of a Silenos-from-Jersey and fulfilling his destiny by warding off the evil forces of a blue-haired Hades. This is a gross perversion of what is otherwise a narrative of epic proportions and immense cultural gravity. \n\nAre you aware that Herakles killed his wife and three of his own children,<br> as well as attempted to murder the man who raised him as a child? This happens,<br> according to the playwright,<br> Euripedes,<br> after Herakles has returned from the Underworld and completed his twelth and final labor: to capture the three-headed hound Cerberus and return him to Eurystheus,<br> the king who held Herakles in servitude. \n\nHerakles returns to Thebes to discover that his wife,<br> children and the husband of his mother have taken sanctuary at an altar in the Temple of Zeus,<br> as the reigning ruler of Thebes,<br> Lycus \u2014who stole the throne from Herakles' father-in-law,<br> Creon \u2014 has sentenced them to death. Incensed,<br> Herakles slays Lycus,<br> and the whole city sings all the praises of Herakles. This is all interrupted by the messenger of the gods,<br> Iris,<br> and Mania,<br> the personification of Madness. Iris informs Herakles that she has been sent by Hera \u2014 the jealous wife of Herakles' father,<br> Zeus \u2014 to drive him mad,<br> mad enough to kill his wife and children. \n\nHerakles is struck by a fit of insanity. He longs to kill the cowardly king,<br> Eurystheus,<br> who forced him to labor for 12 years away from his family. He storms through the palace in Thebes,<br> searching room to room,<br> imagining,<br> with each door,<br> that he is traveling from country to country. \n\nHerakles' wife,<br> Megara,<br> is sheltering with her children. Her husband and their father breaks down the door of the room where they've hidden. Herakles sees his children but believes he is seeing Eurystheus' children. He takes them by the neck and drags them from the palace to the city square where the slain king,<br> Lycus,<br> had gathered relics of Creon's reign to burn. Herakles throws his children atop the pyre and sets it ablaze. Megara watches in horror as her children are immolated; Herakles turns about face and impales his beloved,<br> then tearing her apart limb by limb. \n\nStill in search of the coward,<br> Eurystheus,<br> Herakles encounters Amphitryon,<br> the husband of his mother,<br> and raises his sword so to fell the man he has mistaken as Eurystheus. Before the fatal blow is struck,<br> the goddess Athena appears before Herakles and slaps him about the face. Herakles falls into a deep slumber like a stone to the ground. \n\n[End Scene ",<br>"json_metadata":" \"tags\":[\"art\",<br>\"culture\",<br>\"greece\",<br>\"pottery\",<br>\"mythology\" ,<br>\"image\":[\"https:\/\/steemitimages.com\/DQmctLDL7iuhLsuBhrQwxMyGd7fSSTtZQoD7rNRnZo2gCfb\/42-p219-medium.jpg\" ,<br>\"app\":\"steemit\/0.1\",<br>\"format\":\"markdown\" "
vote
"voter":"hyacinthesin",
"author":"hyacinthesin",
"permlink":"the-madness-of-herakles-calyx-krater-by-astea-circa-350-bce",
"weight":10000
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