top of page
An illustration of someone surrounded by books of fairy tales.jpg

The Seventh Labor--Herakles Catches The Mad Bull Of Crete

Great, you've picked a new story. Here are some details about this tale:

Author / Collector:
Book:
Publisher:
Year:
Country:
Subject:
License:
Editor's Notes:
Mary E. Burt
Herakles, the Hero of Thebes, and Other Heroes of the Myth
Charles Scribner's Sons, London & New York
1900
Greece
The Seventh Labor–Herakles Catches The Mad Bull Of Crete: strength, capture, madness, danger, endurance, mastery, labour, courage, wild power, triumph
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a

The Seventh Labor--Herakles Catches The Mad Bull Of Crete

There is an island south of Greece which is so large that it would take you from early morning until late at night to sail past it. There are high mountains all along the shore and they look as if they were covered with snow. There is a cave in one of the mountains where Zeus was hidden when he was a babe so that his father, Kronos, should not swallow him. The nymphs fed him on honey and a famous goat gave him milk.

The name of this island was Crete, and Minos ruled there as king. It was his duty to sacrifice to Poseidon, the God of the Sea, whatever came up out of the water.

Minos was rich and greedy. He loved his cattle better than the will of the gods. It came to pass that a wonderful Bull rose from the sea while Minos was king. When Minos saw him he admired the beauty of the animal so much that he resolved to keep him. He drove the Bull into his barn and sacrificed another to the God of the Sea.

Poseidon grew angry with him and caused the Bull to become mad so that no one dared to approach him. Eurystheus ordered Herakles to catch him and bring him to Mykenæ.

So Herakles went to Crete and begged Minos to give him the Bull. The king told him that he was entirely welcome to the Bull if he could catch him. Herakles seized him by the horns and bound his feet together and carried him off to Mykenæ.

There he showed the mad animal to Eurystheus and then set him free. The Bull wandered off to Sparta and over the hills of Arcadia and crossing the Isthmus, he reached Marathon, where he left the land and swam off into the sea.

Folktales, Fairytales, myths, legends, stories, fantasy

© Website & Original Content Copyright Clive Gilson - 2011-2026
bottom of page