HERMES was the great Olympian god of herds, travel, trade, heraldry, language, athletics and thievery. This page describes his divine roles and privileges including:--
1. Hermes God of Animal Husbandry
2. Hermes God of Heralds
3. Hermes God of Birds of Omen
4. Hermes God of Thieves & Trickery
5. Hermes God of Trade & Merchants
6. Hermes God of Language & Crafty Wiles
7. Hermes God of Roads, Travelers & Hospitality
8. Hermes God of Feasts & Banquets
9. Hermes God Protector of the Home
10. Hermes Guide of the Dead
11. Hermes God of Sleep & Dreams of Omen
12. Hermes God of Rustic Divination
13. Hermes God of Contests, Gymnasiums & the Games
GOD OF GUILE
Hermes was the god of guile in its many aspects:
including deception, crafty words, persuasion, and the wiles of thieves and merchants. He also employed the sleep to maze the minds of men.
"May Maia's son [Hermes], as he rightfully should, lend his aid [to Orestes in the slaying of the murderers of his father, using a false identity and guile to gain access], for no one can better sail a deed on a favoring course, when he would do so. But by his mysterious utterance he brings darkness over men's eyes by night, and by day he is no more clear at all." - Aeschylus, Libation Bearers 811
GOD OF THIEVES & CATTLE HUSTLING
Another role of Hermes, derived from his function as the god of cattle, was thievery. A major form of banditry in ancient Greece was cattle-hustling.
"Autolykos ... excelled all mankind in thieving and subtlety of oaths, having won this mastery from the god Hermes himself." - Homer, Odyssey 19.396
She [Maia] bare a son [Hermes], of many shifts, blandly cunning, a robber, a cattle rustler, a bringer of dreams, a watcher by night, a thief at the gates." - Homeric Hymn 4 to Hermes
"[Apollon to Hermes:] `
O rogue, deceiver, crafty in heart ... I most surely believe that you have broken into many a well-built house and stripped more than one poor wretch bare this night, gathering his goods together all over the house without noise. You will plague many a lonely herdsman in mountain glades, when you come on herds and thick-fleeced sheep, and have a hankering after flesh ... you comrade of dark night. Surely hereafter this shall be your title amongst the deathless gods, to be called the Arkhos Pheleteon (prince of robbers) continually." - Homeric Hymn 4 to Hermes 282
Hermes ... to rejoice is thine ... in fraud divine." - Orphic Hymn 28 to Hermes
Into the house came Hermes in the shape of a young man, unforeseen, uncaught, eluding the doorkeeper with his robber’s foot." - Nonnus, Dionysiaca 3.373
GOD OF LANGUAGE, LEARNING & CRAFTY WILES
Hermes came to be regarded as the god of language, alongside Mnemosyne (the goddess of memory). He was said to have been the inventor of writing, which in ancient Greece was first employed in the missives carried by heralds and the stock-taking of merchants and property owners. In addition, he was sometimes said to have taught mankind their many tongues, and so was the god of the "babelisation" of language, so to speak.
As well as writing, he presided over eloquence and persuasion, skills employed by those under his patronage: heralds, merchants, thieves and conmen. Similarly he was
the god of crafty thoughts and wiles, and the use of persuasive deception and trickery.
GOD OF SPEECH, CRAFTY WORDS & ELOQUENCE
"Also the Guide, Argeiphontes [Hermes], contrived within her [Pandora, the first woman]
lies and crafty words and a deceitful nature at the will of loud thundering Zeus, and the Herald of the gods [Hermes] put speech in her." - Hesiod, Works and Days 80
IDENTIFIED WITH FOREIGN GODS
Hermes was identified with the Roman god Mercury, the Thracian Zalmoxis and the Egyptian ibis-headed god Thoth.
I)[B] IDENTIFIED WITH THRACIAN ZALMOXIS[/B]
Herodotus, Histories 5. 7 (trans. Godley) (Greek historian C5th B.C.) :
"They [the Threikoi or Thracians] worship no gods but Ares, Dionysos, and Artemis [the Thrakian gods Ares, Sabazios and Bendis]. Their princes, however, unlike the rest of their countrymen, worship Hermes [probably the Thracian god Zalmoxis] above all gods and swear only by him, claiming him for their ancestor."
Thoth was considered one of the more important deities of the Egyptian pantheon. In art, he was often depicted as a man with the head of an ibis or a baboon, animals sacred to him. His feminine counterpart was Seshat Thoth's chief temple was located in the city of Khmun, later renamed Hermopolis Magna during the Greco-Roman era (in reference to him through the Greeks' interpretation that he was the same as their god Hermes) One of Thoth 's titles, "Three times great, great" was translated to the Greek τρισμεγιστος (Trismegistos) making Hermes Trismegistus.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thoth
II) IDENTIFIED WITH EGYPTIAN THOTH
H
erodotus, Histories 2. 138 (trans. Godley) (Greek historian C5th B.C.) :
"[In the city of Bubastis is a] temple of Hermes [i.e. the Egyptian god Thoth]."
Ovid, Metamorphoses 5. 319 ff (trans. Melville) (Roman epic C1st B.C. to C1st A.D.) :
"Typhoeus, issuing from earth's lowest depths, struck terror in those heavenly hearts, and they all turned their backs and fled, until they found refuge in Aegyptus and the seven-mouthed Nilus . . . Typhoeus Terrigena (Earthborn) even there pursued them and the gods concealed themselves in spurious shapes . . . Cyllenius [Hermes] [as] an ibis [i.e. the ibis-headed Egyptian god Thoth]."
http://www.theoi.com/Olympios/HermesGod.html