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Hades
Hades is the lord of the dead and ruler of the
nether world, which is referred to as the domain of Hades or, by transference,
as Hades alone. He is the son of Cronus
and Rhea. When the three sons
of Cronus divided the world among each other, Hades was given the underworld,
while his brothers Zeus
and Poseidon took the
upperworld and the sea respectively. For a while Hades ruled the underworld
together with Persephone,
whom he had abducted from the upperworld, but Zeus ordered him to release
Persephone back into the care of her mother Demeter. However, before she left he gave
her a pomegranate and when she ate of it, it bound her to the underworld
forever.
Hades sits on a throne made of ebony, and
carries a scepter. He also has a helmet, given to him by the Cyclopes, which can make
him invisible. Hades rules the dead, assisted by various (demonic) helpers,
such as Thanatos and Hypnos, the ferryman Charon, and the hound Cerberus. Many heroes from
Greek mythology have descended into the underworld, either to question the
shades or trying to free them. Although Hades does not allow his subjects to
leave his domain, on several occasions he has granted permission, such as when Orpheus requested the return of his
beloved Eurydice.
Hades possesses the riches of the earth, and is
thus referred to as 'the Rich One'. Possibly also because -- as Sophocles
writes -- 'the gloomy Hades enriches himself with our sighs and our tears'. Of
all the gods, Hades is the one who is liked the least and even the gods
themselves have an aversion of him. People avoided speaking his name lest they
attracted his unwanted attention. With their faces averted they sacrificed
black sheep, whose blood they let drip into pits, and when they prayed to him,
they would bang their hands on the ground. The narcissus and the cypress are
sacred to him.
Other names include Clymenus ('notorious'),
Eubuleus ('well-guessing') and Polydegmon ('who receives many').