This vase was made in Athens in the sixth century BCE. Its shape is a type called an amphora - a two-handled vase used for carrying or storing things like oil, grain, or wine. The vase has been decorated in a style known as 'black figure'. It shows the moment that Heracles has arrived back at the king's palace with the Erymanthian Boar. The king is so frightened that he has jumped into a big storage pot in the ground to hide!
Heracles is nude, because the ancient Greeks thought that looked very heroic. He has a bow with him and a quiver that he can keep his arrows in. Round his chest he has a sword on a strap. There are other figures there too. On the far left we have the god Hermes – the messenger god. We can tell it's him because of his traveller's hat and cloak; his special messenger's staff; and his magic flying boots. Having him in the scene means that he can act as a witness to Heracles's great deeds! It shows that the gods are interested in what heroes and other humans get up to. On the far right there's a woman standing with the king. She is probably supposed to be the queen, Admete. She acts as a second witness; her arms are up in alarm.
The vase can be seen in the National Museum in Warsaw, in Poland (number 198042).
This is the reverse of the Heracles vase, showing two hoplite soldiers and a light armed soldier on a mission.