Hippocrate (mythology) explained

In Greek mythology, Hippocrate (Ancient Greek: Ἱπποκράτη means 'to be superior in horse') was a Thespian princess as one of the 50 daughters of King Thespius and Megamede, daughter of Arneus[1] (or by one of his many wives[2]). She bore Hippozygus to the hero Heracles.[3]

Mythology

When the Cithaeronian lion was harassing the kine of Thespius, the latter asked Herakles to kill the lion.[4] The son of Zeus hunted it for fifty days and finally slayed the beast. The Thespian king entertained him as a guest in a brilliant fashion during that span of time, making Heracles drunk and slept unwittingly with each of his fifty daughters, including Hippocrate. The hero having thought that his bed-fellow was always the same. Thespius intended this to happen because he strongly desired that all his daughters should have children by Hercules.[5] In another version of the myth, the latter had an intercourse with Hippocrate and her siblings for one week,[6] seven laid with Heracles each night.[7]

In some accounts, Heracles bedded in a single night[8] with Hippocrate and her sisters except for one who refused to have a connection with him. The hero thinking that he had been insulted, condemned her to remain a virgin all her life, serving him as his priest.[9]

Notes

  1. [Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus)|Apollodorus]
  2. [Diodorus Siculus]
  3. Apollodorus, 2.7.8
  4. Apollodorus, 2.4.9
  5. Apollodorus, 2.4.10 & 2.7.8; Diodorus Siculus, 4.29.1 & 3; Tzetzes, Chiliades 2.221–225
  6. [Athenaeus]
  7. Diodorus Siculus, 4.29.3, f.n. 51
  8. Pausanias, 9.27.6–7; Gregorius Nazianzenus, Orat. IV, Contra Julianum I (Migne S. Gr. 35.661)
  9. Pausanias, 9.27.6

References