Labor 8: The Horses of Diomedes

      The horses of Diomedes

      The Man-Eating Horses of Diomedes

      After Hercules had captured the Cretan Bull,
      Eurystheus sent him to get the man-eating mares of
      Diomedes, the king of a Thracian tribe called the
      Bistones, and bring them back to him in Mycenae.

      According to Apollodorus, Hercules sailed with a
      band of volunteers across the Aegean to Bistonia.
      There he and his companions overpowered the
      grooms who were tending the horses, and drove them
      to the sea. But by the time he got there, the Bistones
      had realized what had happened, and they sent a band
      of soldiers to recapture the animals. To free himself
      to fight, Hercules entrusted the mares to a youth
      named Abderos.

      Unfortunately, the mares got the better of young
      Abderos and dragged him around until he was killed.

      Meanwhile Hercules fought the Bistones, killed
      Diomedes, and made the rest flee. In honor of the
      slain Abderos, Hercules founded the city of Abdera.

      The hero took the mares back to Eurystheus, but
      Eurystheus set them free. The mares wandered around
      until eventually they came to Mount Olympos, the
      home of the gods, where they were eaten by wild
      beasts.

      Euripides gives two different versions of the story,
      but both of them differ from Apollodorus’s in that
      Hercules seems to be performing the labor alone,
      rather than with a band of followers. In one,
      Diomedes has the four horses harnessed to a chariot,
      and Hercules has to bring back the chariot as well as
      the horses. In the other, Hercules tames the horses
      from his own chariot:

      He mounted on a chariot and tamed with the bit the
      horses of Diomedes, that greedily champed their
      bloody food at gory mangers with unbridled jaws,
      devouring with hideous joy the flesh of men.

      Euripides, Hercules, 380