
| Hercules |
Real Name: Hercules
Class: extradimensional (Olympian diety)
Occupation: warrior , wanderer
Affiliations: Olympian pantheon , member of the Avengers
Scale of Operations: worldwide , pan-dimensional
Powers: Hercules' Olympian physique provides him with unbelievable strength, endurance, and resistance to injury. Hercules never ages and can only be killed on the Olympian plane of existence. Hercules has a Golden Mace which is crafted from an unknown, highly-indestructible material.
History:
Hercules is the son of Zeus, king of the Olympian gods, and
a mortal woman who lived in ancient Greece some three thousand years ago.
Recognizing the need for a son who would be powerful enough to defend both the
Olympian gods and humanity from future dangers he foresaw, Zeus seduced Alcmena
in the guise of her husband, King Amphitryon of Troezen. Thanks to Zeus's
enchantment, Hercules was born with the potential for extraordinary strength,
which he first displayed before he was even one year old by strangling two
serpents which attacked him. As an adult, Hercules is best known for his
celebrated Twelve Labors, which were performed in part to prove his worthiness
for immortality to Zeus. (One of these Labors, the cleansing of the Augean
Stables, was actually performed by the Eternal called the Forgotten One, who was
sometimes mistaken for Hercules.)
In the course of
these Labors, Hercules provoked the wrath of three immortals who remain his
enemies to this day. By slaughtering the man-eating Stymphalian Birds, he
enraged the war god Ares, to whom they were sacred. In temporarily capturing
Cerberus, the three-headed hound that serves as guardian to the Olympian
underworld, Hercules offended Pluto, the lord of that realm. By killing the
Nemean Lion, the Hydra and other creatures spawned by the inconceivably
grotesque and powerful monster Typhoeus, Hercules gained the bitter enmity of
Typhon, the immortal humanoid offspring of Typhoeus and a
Titaness.
However, it was the centaur Nessus who
caused Hercules' mortal demise. Nessus kidnapped Hercules' wife Deianeira,
whereupon Hercules shot him with an arrow. Feigning a wish to make amends, the
dying centaur told Deianeira how to make a love charm from his allegedly
enchanted blood, aware that it was now tainted with the lethal poison of the
Hydra, in which Hercules had dipped his arrows. Some time after Nessus' death,
Deianeira, distraught over her husband's latest infidelity, rubbed the supposed
love charm into Hercules' shirt. Zeus then intervened, consuming the pyre with
his thunderbolts and bringing Hercules to Olympus to be made a true
immortal.
In recent years, the Asgardian witch called the
Enchantress hoped to gain revenge on her enemies, the hero team Avengers. She
mesmerized Hercules and set him to attack the team, but the Avenger Hawkeye
managed to free him from his thrall and the Enchantress was routed. However,
Hercules was exiled from Olympus by Zeus as punishment for his unauthorized
excursion to Earth. The Avengers housed Hercules as their guest for months, and
he often assisted them in their adventures. He was eventually made an official
member of the team, but he returned to Olympus with the Avengers to rescue the
other Olympians from the vengeful Typhon. Afterward, Hercules elected to remain
on Olympus with Zeus's blessing.
Later, the Olympian god Ares hoped to
incite war among Olympus and Asgard, and eventually Earth. Ares turned all the
Olympian gods to crystal, and, as Hercules was unaffected by being only
half-god, Ares' agents beat him severely and abandoned him on Earth. Hercules
remained amnesiac for many weeks, until he was discovered by Hawkeye and
returned to the Avengers. With the Avengers' aid, the plot was uncovered and
Ares was stopped. Hercules and his teammate, the Asgardian god Thor, sealed the
access to both worlds.
Hercules continued to occasionally interact with
Earth, as was the case with his brief membership in the super-team called the
Champions. He also kept in touch with the Avengers, assisting them against
menaces such as Korvac the Enemy. Eventually, Hercules rejoined the Avengers on
a full-time basis.
When the Avengers' mansion headquarters was invaded
by Baron Helmut Zemo's Masters of Evil, Hercules was beaten so severely by a
contingent of Masters that he was left near death, in a coma. Zeus arranged for
Hercules to be returned to Olympus, and in revenge, ordered the imprisonment of
the Avengers in Hades. The Avengers escaped to confront Zeus directly, but they
were saved only by the intervention of Hercules, who had made a recovery and
convinced his father the Avengers were not to blame. Nevertheless, Zeus ordered
that Hercules remain in Olympus forever.
It was not long, however, until
Hercules disobeyed his father, returning to Earth when the Avengers required
help against the villainous High Evolutionary, who misguidingly hoped to
forcibly jumpstart humankind's evolution. In the final battle, Hercules was
attached to a machine that would "evolve" him to a superior state than the
Evolutionary. Instead, the device jumpstarted the Evolutionary's physiology as
well, evolving both to a state beyond godhood, and the two dissipated from
Earth's plane.
In reality, the two were captured by the enigmatic beings
known as the Celestials and held prisoner in the so-called Black Galaxy. Thor
and his friend, Eric Masterson, discovered their fate during an adventure at the
High Evolutionary's citadel, Wundagore. Both Masterson and Thor helped rescue
the two, and Hercules, Thor, and Masterson returned to Earth, while the High
Evolutionary turned Wundagore into a spaceship and returned to the Black Galaxy.
Hercules, Thor, and Masterson were then viciously attacked by Mongoose
using weapons he had stolen from Wundagore. Mongoose almost killed Thor using a
powerful energy beam. Masterson took a killing blow for Thor, giving Thor and
Hercules a chance to defeat Mongoose. Unfortunately, Masterson was dying from
his wounds, which led Thor and Masterson to be merged together. Hercules
remained on hand to help his friends, and he would also return to the Avengers
shortly afterwards, becoming an active reserve member during the UN
reorganization of the team. Hercules returned to full-time active duty during a
disappearance of Thor.
Hercules was soon confronted by Zeus, and they
had a falling out over Hercules's apparent preference for the mortal world.
Punishing his son, Zeus stripped him of his immortality and much of his godly
power, exiling him once more. The traumatized Hercules drew emotional support
from the Avengers, especially Deathcry, whom he later aided in returning to her
alien Shi'ar homeworld. On returning to Earth, though, Hercules discovered to
his horror that most of the Avengers were missing and presumed dead after their
battle with the psychic menace of Onslaught. A despairing Hercules succumbed to
alcoholism and was no help in trying to hold together the group, which soon
disbanded.
Hercules began to wander in search of new adventures, serving
briefly with the corporate super-team Heroes for Hire. When the supposedly dead
Avengers returned from their Onslaught disappearance, Hercules joined many of
the other Avengers in reorganizing the team, though he has opted to remain an
inactive member rather than rejoining the active roster. Also during this time,
Hercules sought out one of those responsible for his coma, the villain Goliath
who had become the hero Atlas. The resulting battle was cut short by Hawkeye,
who convinced Hercules to stand down, at the cost of the two's friendship.
Hercules continues to aid the Avengers on an as-needed basis, such as
helping them against the villainous Exemplars and when the time-travelling Kang
nearly conquered the world.