Two Greek Heroes. A Comparison.


In the Iliad, Homer wrote, [1] “The wrath of Achilles is my theme. That fatal wrath, which in the fulfillment of the will of Zeus, sent so many Achaean noblemen to the Hall of Hades leaving their bodies as carrion for the dogs and passing birds...” From this extract it is evident that Achilles was the fundamental character and the greatest warrior in the Iliad. He was seen as the Greek hero of the Trojan War, and has as such been cemented into our universal history as an almost unconquerable fighter whose only weakness was his own Achilles heel - for which he was named. Thus, how does this hero compare to another, such as Herakles?

Achilles and Herakles were both demigods born to fulfill a destiny that was predestined before either of them were born. In the case of Achilles, his mother Thetis had been pursued by both Zeus and Poseidon. However, upon hearing of the prophecy that stated Thetis’ future son was to be greater than his father, they retreated leaving her free to marry the mortal and father of Achilles, Peleus. Once he was born Thetis attempted to make him immortal by bathing him in the river Styx.Yet she missed a spot on his heel and it became his only weakness. 

The river made Achilles near invincible with godlike strength and speed, and it was soon prophesied that Troy could not be taken without his help. Thetis however, was aware that if he went to Troy he would die and so she hid him in Lycomedes disguised as a girl. The ploy worked until Odysseus discovered him and led him willingly to the war that would result in his death.

Herakles’ destiny on the other hand was bound to him by his father Zeus, and his meddling wife Hera.  On the day Herakles was meant to be born Zeus proudly stated that the son of his bloodline through Perseus would rule over Mycenae and all its realm. He had no idea that his vengeful wife would suspend the birth for several days by sitting in the binding position outside of Alcmene’s home, so that another son of his bloodline through Perseus would be seen as the boy in the prophecy. This was unfortunate for Herakles because from that point on he was to forever be in the shadow of his cowardly cousin, once removed, Eurytheus. 

Herakles was incredibly strong and courageous just like Achilles, but unlike Achilles he was not seemingly invincible. Just as Achilles was sent away in his youth so was Herakles who was plagued by murderous rages due to Hera’s hatred for him. These rages led him to murder his music teacher which resulted in him being sent to Amphitryons’ cattle ranch. This would not be the only murder his temper would lead to, as it would ultimately cause the death of his first family resulting in him taking on twelve labors set by Eurytheus as penance. He was told that if he completed all twelve he would be forgiven and granted immortality.

Achilles may have disguised himself as an undefeatable warrior at troy but he captured twenty three towns in Trojan territory before he even got there, thus it is well known that these two heroes were incredible warriors, and this brought them both to situations where they would possibly have to enter into funereal games. Achilles honored his dead friend Patroclus with his own funereal games much like what the Olympics came to be much later when Herakles instituted the first ever games to honor his father Zeus. While Achilles had armor made for him from the Olympians divine blacksmith Hephaestus, Herakles wore the skin of a lion like a cloak wherever he ventured.

Both men eventually married, twice, in Herakles’ case, and they took on lovers too. They share having murdered people that they cared for. For Achilles it was Penthesilea, an Amazon woman whom he murdered during the fight for Troy and after he discovered it was her he felt great remorse. They did share a difference when it came to relationships. Achilles who had only one son would never have as vast a family as Herakles who while living on the cattle ranch impregnated fifty of Amphitryons’ daughters, for the man wanted Herakles’ bloodline in his family. Achilles too impregnated the daughter of the man who took him in as a youth, but the relationship was short lived for he was soon to be discovered and taken to Troy.

The two heroes had many similarities but they were different from each other too. Achilles was seen as respectable because he was a hero of war while Herakles was seen as immoral because of his murderous rages, but they both had tempers, Herakles just could not be trusted to keep his in check. And because war granted you status in ancient Greece the terrible things Achilles did such as the rape of Cassandra in Athenes' temple on her alter played no role in the portrayal of his heroism, while poor Herakles, who was driven mad by Hera, was ill-treated and cheated out of the opportunities he had worked so hard to accomplish because murder, especially that of your own blood was a huge disgrace to the ancient Greeks.

In the end neither of the two proved to be invincible. Achilles was killed in the Trojan War when an arrow shot by Paris and guided by Athene, struck him in his heel. Herakles died a brutal death when his wife was tricked into giving him a cloak covered in the blood of a centaur who was killed by his own arrow that had been dipped in the poisonous blood of the hydra he killed as his second labor. Zeus then guides Herakles to Olympus where he is finally granted immortality, even if it is after death. Interestingly enough it is one of Herakles arrows dipped in hydra blood that kills Paris after he shoots Achilles.

Achilles may not have received immortality like Herakles, but his name has most certainly been immortalized in modern society. Today we call the tendon on our heel the Achilles tendon and it is notorious in sports, mainly with runners because if it were to rupture or develop tendonosis due to overuse an athlete would have to put their career on hold for over a year or retire indefinitely.

Achilles and Herakles were the equivalent of super heroes to the ancient Greeks and because of Achilles heel being his only weakness the modern use of the phrase, ‘Achilles heel,’ is used when we refer to someone having an overwhelming vice or flaw that eventually leads to their destruction or the end of their career. For many famous, ‘idols,’ it is developing an addiction to drugs. For Mike Tyson it was woman, as he was accused of rape on more than one occasion and it practically ruined his career. Our very own South African fallen hero Oscar Pistorius has an Achilles heel too. His penchant for letting off loaded guns in public places with no regard for the law and a fascination with firearms led to his fall from grace when he murdered his model girlfriend, Reeva.

Even modern super heroes from comic books have an Achilles heel. For Iron man it is literally his heart, for Batman it is his parents and for Venom it is fire. Leaving the most similar to Achilles for last there is superman whose Achilles heel is kryptonite. They are both almost invincible, strong and can be blinded by their pride. Neither of them were born with their powers. Superman received his as a child too, but unlike Achilles, his river Styx was the rays of the yellow sun which he absorbed once he came to earth. This of course is not the only case of a hero having ties to Achilles in comics or cartoons. For instance, the anti-hero Obelix in the series of cartoons named Asterix and Obelix, was submerged in a liquid that turned him into a notorious fighter with inhuman strength like that of Achilles. However, he was in no way a demigod and the liquid was a magic potion which he happened to fall into a cauldron of as a child.

Herakles like Achilles was immortalized in a cartoon known as [2]Hercules, but for Herakles Disney deliberately attempted to base the character on the actual hero. However, in the loosely based retelling of the myth Herakles’ enemy was Hades, and his minions, Pain and Panic actually fed him the potion that would make him immortal. He lives with adoptive parents, he does the twelve labors to prove he is a hero, and Pegasus becomes his steed. This is wrong in many ways because Pain and Panic are reminiscent of Ares’ sons, Deimos and Phobos, Hera is Herakles enemy not his mother (and I am sure the demigod would be horrified by this depiction), the twelve labors were for atonement and Pegasus was ridden by Bellerophon. The movie went on to become a cartoon series featuring Hercules during his time at the Prometheus academy.

In 2004 the movie Troy was released with [3]Brad Pitt as Achilles. However the movie and the historical version of his character is vastly different. For instance, in the movie Achilles is portrayed as a nice enough guy, he rescues the princess, he is a great warrior who has been fighting his entire life and one could say it is almost depicted as if he falls in love with Briseis.

This is a complete contradiction to how he is portrayed in the Iliad. In this epic of Homer, Achilles is cruel with a terrible temper. He takes pleasure in seeing the Greeks lose and die and seems to have absolutely no morals. He does not love Briseis, she is nothing more than a war prize to him, but he does become fond enough of her so that when Agamemnon takes her for his own he refuses to fight. That is one example of his temper, another is when Patroclus is killed by Hector and Achilles retaliates by killing Hector and choosing to drag his body behind his chariot instead of allowing it to have funeral rights. He only relents when Priam, Hectors father pleads to Achilles for his son’s body back.

Therefore, Achilles and Herakles have many similarities including a heroic destiny that ends in their tragic deaths, but they are different to each other too, in the way that they are portrayed and the way they have chosen to live their lives. Neither of them has escaped without misfortune and yet in the end we still remember their names and continue to because of the influence of their legends and mythology.





[1]Homer (800BC:1)
[2] Ron Clements (1997)
[3]Wolfgang Petersen (2004)

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