Online Encyclopedia

HYDRA (watersnake)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 34 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HYDRA (watersnake)  , in Greek legend, the offspring of Typhon and Echidna, a gigantic monster with nine heads (the number is variously given), the centre one being immortal . Its haunt was a hill beneath a
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plane tree near the
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river
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Amymone, in the I marshes of Lerna by
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Argos . The destruction of this Lernaean hydra was one of the twelve " labours " of Heracles, which he accomplished with the assistance of lolaus . Finding that as soon as one head was cut off two grew up in its place, they burnt out the roots with firebrands, and at last severed the immortal head from the
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body, and buried it under a mighty block of rock . The arrows dipped by Heracles in the poisonous
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blood or gall of the monster ever afterwards inflicted fatal wounds . The generally accepted interpretation of the legend is that " the hydra denotes the
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damp, swampy ground of Lerna with its numerous springs (KeePaXal, heads); its
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poison the miasmic vapours rising from the stagnant
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water; its
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death at the hands of Heracles the introduction of the culture and consequent
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purification of the
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soil " (Preller) . A euhemeristic explanation is given by
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Palaephatus (39) . An ancient king named Lernus occupied a small citadel named Hydra, which was defended by So bowmen . Heracles besieged the citadel and hurled firebrands at the garrison . As often as one of the defenders fell, two others at once stepped into his place . The citadel was finally taken with the assistance of the army of Iolaus and the garrison slain . See
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Hesiod, Theog., 313; Euripides, Hercules furens, 419;
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Pausanias ii .

37;

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Apollodorus ii . 5, 2; Diod . Sic. iv . 11; Roscher's Lexikon der Hythologie . In the article GREEK
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ART, fig . 20 represents the slaying of the Lernaean hydra by Heracles .

End of Article: HYDRA (watersnake)
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HYDRA (or SDRA, NIDRA, IDERO, &c.; anc. Hydrea)
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HYDRACRYLIC ACID (ethylene lactic acid)

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