Hellenic Tradition
Hades (realm)
HAY-deez (Greek Ἅιδης)
The Greek underworld — the realm beneath the earth ruled by Hades, divided into Elysium (the blessed dead), the Asphodel Meadows (the ordinary dead), and Tartarus (the punished) — entered by crossing the river Styx.
Hades (Greek Ἅιδης — the name of both the realm and its divine ruler; aídês may mean “the unseen one”) is the Greek underworld: the realm beneath the earth where all the dead go, without exception, when they die. It is not — in early Greek religion — primarily a place of punishment or reward; it is the universal destination of the dead, a vast, dim, grey realm underground where the souls (psychai) of the dead move as faint images of their living selves.
The structure of Hades
The underworld’s geography evolved across Greek literature. By the classical period, the following picture was established: the dead cross the river Styx (or Acheron) via the ferryman Charon, who requires an obol (coin) as payment — hence the Greek custom of placing a coin in the mouth of the dead. After crossing, they are judged by Minos, Rhadamanthys, and Aiakos (in Plato’s Gorgias 523a). Depending on their verdict, souls go to Tartarus (punishment), the Asphodel Meadows (ordinary dead, neither very good nor very bad), or Elysium (the supremely virtuous and the heroic dead).
Homer’s Nekuia
Odyssey 11 — the Nekuia — gives the most vivid early picture. Odysseus digs a trench, pours offerings of blood, and the dead crowd to drink: his mother, his former comrades, the great heroes. The souls have no real individual consciousness until they drink blood; the dead are diminished versions of the living, longing for sunlight and life. Achilles tells Odysseus he would rather be a landless laborer on earth than rule over all the dead. Hades is not appealing — it is simply inevitable.
Hades the god
The ruler Hades himself is the most remote of the Olympians. He received his realm in the division after the Titans’ defeat (Theogony 453–506: “the dark places beneath the earth” fell to him). He is not malevolent — his world operates by strict justice — but he is implacable. The Homeric Hymn to Demeter shows him abducting Persephone not out of cruelty but because the cosmic arrangement required someone to rule the dead.
Related Terms
Daimon
A Greek divine intermediary — a spirit occupying the space between gods and mortals, including Hesiod's spirits of the golden age, personal guardian-spirits, and the inner voice Socrates called his daimonion.
HellenicElysium
The Greek paradise where the virtuous and heroic dead dwell in happiness — named in Homer's Odyssey as the Elysian plain where the good are sent rather than dying, and elaborated across Greek tradition.
HellenicMoirai
The three Greek fate-goddesses — Klotho the Spinner, Lakhesis the Allotter, and Atropos the Unturnable — who control the thread of every mortal and divine life and whose decrees even Zeus respects.
HellenicPsyche
The Greek soul — the animating force that departs the body at death as a pale image of the living person, descends to Hades, and in Platonic thought is the immortal, divine core that pre-exists birth and survives death.
HellenicStyx
The river bordering the Greek underworld and the most binding oath in Greek religion — when gods swear by the Styx, even Zeus is bound, and breaking that oath brings a year of unconsciousness and nine years of exile from the divine council.