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After the complicated business with the Stymphalian Birds, Hercules easily got rid of the Cretan Bull.
At that time, Minos, King of Crete,
controlled many of the islands in the seas around Greece,
and was such a powerful ruler that the Athenians sent him
tribute every year. There are many bull stories about Crete.
Zeus, in the shape of a bull, had carried Minos' mother
Europa to Crete, and the Cretans were fond of the sport of
bull-leaping, in which contestants grabbed the horns of a
bull and were thrown over its back. Minos himself, in order to prove his
claim to the throne, had promised the sea-god Poseidon that
he would sacrifice whatever the god sent him from the sea.
Poseidon sent a bull, but Minos thought it was too beautiful
to kill, and so he sacrificed another bull. Poseidon was furious with Minos for
breaking his promise. In his anger, he made the bull rampage
all over Crete, and caused Minos' wife Pasiphae to fall in
love with the animal. As a result, Pasiphae gave birth to
the Minotaur, a monster with the head of a bull and the body
of a man. Minos had to shut up this beast in the Labyrinth,
a huge maze underneath the palace, and every year he fed it
prisoners from Athens.
Bull fresco from the Palace of Minos in
Knossos Photograph courtesy of the Department of Archaeology, Boston
University, Saul S. Weinberg Collection
When Hercules got to Crete, he easily wrestled the bull to the ground and drove it back to King Eurystheus. Eurystheus let the bull go free. It wandered around Greece, terrorizing the people, and ended up in Marathon, a city near Athens.
The Athenian hero Theseus tied up some loose ends of this story. He killed the Cretan Bull at Marathon. Later, he sailed to Crete, found his way to the center of the Labyrinth, and killed the Minotaur.
Theseus wrestling and killing the Minotaur.