Cretan Bull

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The Cretan Bull is one of the most intriguing creatures in Greek mythology because it appears in several myths and connects the stories of powerful figures such as King Minos, Herakles, and Theseus. Its origin begins with a broken promise. King Minos of Crete once prayed to Poseidon, god of the sea, asking for a sign to prove his divine right to rule. Poseidon answered by sending a magnificent white bull rising from the waves. It was meant to be sacrificed back to the god as a gesture of gratitude. However Minos was so captivated by the bull’s beauty that he decided to keep it and offered a lesser animal to Poseidon instead. Enraged by this deceit Poseidon cursed both the king and the bull.

In punishment Poseidon caused Queen Pasiphae, wife of Minos, to fall in unnatural love with the bull. From this union came the Minotaur, the half-man half-bull creature later imprisoned in the Labyrinth. Meanwhile the Cretan Bull itself became wild and destructive, rampaging across the island of Crete. It tore through fields, smashed walls, and terrified the populace with unstoppable strength. Some stories say it could even breathe fire. It became a symbol of divine anger, a reminder that offending the gods always has consequences.

The bull entered wider Greek mythology through the hero Herakles. Capturing the Cretan Bull was his seventh labor. Herakles sailed to Crete, confronted the raging beast, and subdued it using only his bare hands. He brought it back to King Eurystheus in Tiryns, but Eurystheus, terrified by the sight of the creature, ordered it released. The freed bull wandered north into Greece and eventually reached the region of Marathon near Athens.

The bull’s story does not end there. Years later the Athenian hero Theseus was sent to capture the Marathonian Bull as a test of his strength and courage. He succeeded, brought it to Athens and sacrificed it to Apollo, thus ending its long path of destruction.


Alexander the Great | Bull | Club | Cretan Bull | Diademed | Herakles | Portrait
Macedon. Koinon
Time of Gordian III (238-244 CE)
Ae25 mm. 11.6g
Obv: AΛЄΞANΔPOY. Diademed head of Alexander the Great right, with hanging hair.
Rev: KΟΙΝΟΝ ΜΑΚƐΔΟΝΩΝ Β ΝƐΩ. Heracles standing right, holding club, capturing Cretan bull
RPC VII.2, 115