therefore chosen by David for his residence, [280]
Heimdall (the Sun) has the point of his horn in Niflheim, [179]
Helios converted by Modern Greeks into Ilias (Elijah), [128]
Hephaestos originally identical with Prometheus and Agni, [390]
Herakles, original Aryan Sun-god, [417];
he kills a lion, [395–6], [399],
a feature which appears to be borrowed from the Semites (the Aryan Sun-god kills a Dragon), [418];
as also the story of Foxes with firebrands attached to their tails, [419];
he dies, but Iolaus wakes him to new life on Olympos, [446]
Heroic age, in Book of Judges, contains mythology, [20–1]