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Hath-Set
Hath-Set
from Wikipedia
Hath-Set
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceFlash Comics #1
(January 1940)
Created byGardner Fox
Dennis Neville
In-story information
Notable aliasesDoctor Anton Hastor, Hector Hall, Helene Astar, Matilda Dunney Roderic, Kristopher Roderic, Vandal Savage[1]
AbilitiesContinuous cycle of reincarnation; possesses his descendants

Hath-Set is a DC Comics supervillain created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville. The character is the archenemy of Hawkman and Hawkgirl.

Publication history

[edit]

Hath-Set first appeared in Flash Comics #1 and was created by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville.

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Hath-Set, a cruel Egyptian priest, leads a rebellion and captures and murders Prince Khufu and Princess Chay-Ara. He kills them with a cursed dagger which has been forged from Nth Metal. This results in a cycle where all three are reincarnated together. In many different incarnations over the centuries, Hath-Set murders Khufu and Chay-Ara's reincarnations.

Doctor Hastor

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In the World War II era, Hath-Set is reincarnated as Anton Hastor. Hawkman (Khufu) and Hawkgirl (Chay-Ara) are reunited while facing Hastor. In 1941, Hastor kidnaps several prominent scientists and uses their talents and knowledge to build a flying airship with weaponry capable of leveling cities. His plans for world conquest are foiled by Hawkman and the All-Star Squadron. Hastor is killed by Hawkman with a crossbow.[2][3]

Infinity Inc.

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In Infinity, Inc, Hath-Set possesses Hector Hall, the son of Khufu and Chay-Ara (who are now called Carter Hall and Shiera Sanders Hall). With Hector under his control, Hath-Set attacks the team. The team defeat Hath-Set, but Hector dies. Hector is resurrected as the Sandman, taking over from the previous user of that name, Garrett Sanford.[4][5]

Helene Astar

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In his most recent incarnation, Hath-Set is a spirit who can control his descendants. The Hawks travel to the Himalayas to search for Speed Saunders. Hath-Set has taken over a woman called "Helene Astar". In attempting to kill the Hawks, Astar dies. The Hawks believe that Astar was a reincarnation of Hath-Set and that Hath-Set has been permanently killed. Hath-Set allies the villainous businessman Kristopher Roderic to kill Hawkman.[6]

Brightest Day

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In the Brightest Day storyline, Hath-Set is living in the jungles of Peru.[7] He is allied with Queen Shrike (Khea), Hawkgirl's mother. Hath-Set collects the remains of Hawkman and Hawkgirl's past bodies and uses them to build a mystical gateway.[8] Hawkman and Hawkgirl follow Hath-Set through this gateway to Hawkworld. Hawkgirl is captured by Hath-Set and Khea. The Life Entity tells Hawkgirl she must prevent Hath-Set from killing Hawkman.[9] Hath-Set ties Hawkgirl to the mystical gateway. Following Khea's orders, Hath-Set strikes Hawkgirl in order to lure Hawkman. Hawkman arrives and distracts Hath-Set. Hawkgirl kills Hath-Set by snapping his neck.[10]

DC Rebirth

[edit]

In the DC Rebirth relaunch, Hat-Seth was born in prehistoric times. His life was a mixture of lies and half-truths woven by Barbatos. After an encounter with a time-displaced Batman, Hat-Seth founded the Judas Tribe, also called the Bat Tribe.[11] Hath-Set made a weapon out of Nth Metal to slay the Chieftain of the Bird Tribe and his wife, causing all three to reincarnate.[12]

Hath-Set returns in the pages of Hawkman. When Hawkman and Hawkwoman are reincarnated for a final time as their Golden Age incarnations, Anton Hastor realizes that the cycle of reincarnation has been broken and he will be able to kill the two for good and pass on to the afterlife. He steals his Nth Metal dagger from the JSA Brownstone and uses it to telepathically contact Hawkman. He murders the passengers of an entire train and raises them as zombies via necromancy. Hawkman is initially paralyzed by his fear of death, but overcomes it and disarms Hastor by stabbing himself with the dagger. He destroys the dagger and Hastor commits suicide by standing on a collapsing railway bridge. Hath-Set continues to be reincarnated throughout the centuries and attack the Hawks.[13]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Hath-Set can reincarnate into different descendants. He is also shown to be an expert at armed combat.

In other media

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Hath-Set is a in DC Comics, serving as the primary archenemy of and . An ancient Egyptian priest, he murdered Prince and Princess Chay-Ara—the original incarnations of Hawkman and Hawkgirl—using a cursed forged from Nth metal, which inadvertently bound their souls in an eternal cycle of and conflict. Created by writer and artist Dennis Neville, Hath-Set debuted in #1 (January 1940), where his actions set the foundational mythology for the Hawks' ongoing saga. In the Hawks' lore, Hath-Set's killing of the royal lovers prompted Khufu's dying curse that they would meet again in future lives to settle the score, ensuring Hath-Set's alongside his foes across millennia. This cycle has persisted through various DC continuities, with Hath-Set often possessing or influencing descendants to resume his vendetta, manifesting as threats like Dr. Anton Hastor in the . Over decades of publication, Hath-Set embodies the inescapable triumvirate dynamic central to and 's lore, driving narratives of pursuit, torment, and attempted resolution. Key storylines, such as the 2006 Hawkgirl: Hath-Set graphic novel collection, depict the heroes actively hunting him down to break the curse, highlighting his role as an omnipresent force in their reincarnated existences. His character underscores themes of fate, , and retribution, making him integral to the Hawks' identity in over 80 years of history.

Publication history

Creation and debut

Hath-Set was created by writer Gardner Fox and artist Dennis Neville in 1940 as the ancient archenemy of Hawkman and Hawkgirl. The character debuted in Flash Comics #1, published by DC Comics with a cover date of January 1940. In the story, titled "The Origin of Hawkman," Hath-Set is introduced through a flashback experienced by protagonist Carter Hall, revealing his past life as Egyptian prince Khufu. As a cruel Egyptian priest, Hath-Set murders Khufu and his betrothed Chay-Ara out of jealousy using a cursed Nth metal dagger. This act, combined with the mystical properties of the Nth metal, binds the souls of Khufu, Chay-Ara, and Hath-Set in an eternal cycle of reincarnation across millennia. Hath-Set's initial portrayal served as a foundational one-off in the Golden Age narrative, establishing the core reincarnation theme central to 's lore while tying it directly to the enigmatic powers of Nth metal. The character's debut emphasized themes of eternal enmity and mystical rebirth, setting the stage for recurring conflicts in the Hawkman mythos without further appearances in the issue beyond the origin flashback.

Evolution across comic eras

Hath-Set's role in DC Comics evolved significantly following the character's debut, with the Silver Age revival of re-establishing the mythos central to the villain's conflict with the heroes. In #34 (February 1961), written by and illustrated by , was reintroduced as an alien law enforcer from Thanagar in a -oriented story focused on pursuing a criminal, without direct ties to ancient origins or at the time. Elements of eternal and cursed enmity were later reincorporated into Hawkman's lore in subsequent Silver Age stories, implicitly linking back to Hath-Set. This adaptation blended the lore with Silver Age sensibilities, positioning Hath-Set as an enduring within Hawkman's broader mythos without a direct appearance in the issue itself. The Post-Crisis on Infinite Earths era brought substantial retcons to Hath-Set's backstory, emphasizing deeper prehistoric roots and societal foundations in the Hawkworld miniseries (1989) by Tim Truman and John Ostrander, followed by the ongoing Hawkworld series (1990-1993). These stories reimagined Hawkman's origins on Thanagar but did not expand Hath-Set's backstory to caveman-era beginnings. Such prehistoric elements, portraying Hath-Set as a primal figure whose actions initiated the Nth metal curse and influenced early human tribes, including the formation of what would later be known as the Judas Tribe, were introduced in Hawkman vol. 4 (2002–2006) by Geoff Johns. This revision integrated Hath-Set more firmly into DC's cosmic and historical continuity, transforming him from a mere priestly villain into a foundational force in human evolution and the Thanagarian-Earth connection. In the , Hath-Set saw increased prominence in team books and event series, appearing in JSA (2005-2006) where his reincarnated form clashed with the Justice Society alongside , highlighting his role as a persistent threat to the team's legacy heroes. The character's arc culminated in the Brightest Day crossover (2010-2011), in which Hath-Set allied with Queen Shrike (Khea), Hawkgirl's mother and ruler of a hidden Hawkworld realm, to exploit the resurrection energies and perpetuate the reincarnation curse; this partnership was explored across issues like Brightest Day #3-8, where Hath-Set's manipulations in Peru's jungles aimed to trap the Hawks in eternal torment. Hath-Set's most recent major storyline occurred in Hawkman vol. 5 #27-29 (November 2020-January 2021), written by Robert Venditti and illustrated by Fernando Blanco, where the villain's confrontation with and led to the breaking of the reincarnation cycle after Hawkgirl killed Hath-Set by snapping his neck. As of November 2025, Hath-Set has had no major starring roles or new arcs, though he has received occasional mentions in ensemble titles.

Fictional character biography

Ancient origins

Hath-Set's earliest known incarnation occurred in prehistoric times, where he existed as a caveman leader who founded the Judas Tribe, also referred to as the Bat Tribe. This tribe stood in direct opposition to the Bird Tribe, with Hath-Set drawing influence from the demonic entity , whom his followers worshipped as a bat-god. Driven by this dark allegiance, Hath-Set spearheaded a brutal war against the Bird Tribe, ultimately using a primitive weapon forged from Nth metal to the Bird Tribe's chieftain and his consort, thereby forging the initial link in their shared cycle of . Reborn millennia later in ancient Egypt around 5000 BCE, Hath-Set served as a high priest to Prince Khufu and Princess Chay-Ara, the reincarnations of the slain prehistoric Bird Tribe leaders. In this role, Hath-Set accompanied the royal couple when they witnessed the crash of a Thanagarian spacecraft in the Egyptian desert, from which they salvaged fragments of the rare Nth metal that powered the vessel. Fascinated by its properties, the trio experimented with the metal, ultimately crafting it into a ceremonial dagger that would prove fateful. Consumed by unrequited jealousy over Chay-Ara's devotion to , Hath-Set betrayed his position of trust and assassinated the prince and princess using the Nth metal dagger. The act not only ended their lives but activated the metal's mystical properties, cursing the souls of , Chay-Ara, and Hath-Set himself to an eternal loop of across history. To ensure the torment's perpetuity, Hath-Set invoked the chaotic serpent god and the devourer , binding his own essence to relentlessly hunt and slay the reincarnated lovers in each successive life.

Reincarnation as Doctor Hastor

In the early 1940s, during , Hath-Set reincarnated as Doctor Anton Hastor, a brilliant but deranged renowned for his expertise in and gadgetry. Driven by fragmented memories of his ancient vendetta against the reincarnated souls of Prince Khufu and Chay-Ara—now Carter Hall () and Shiera Sanders ()—Hastor pursued a scheme of global domination infused with motives. Hastor's plot originated years earlier when he infiltrated the 1929 brain trust of inventor Elwood P. Napier, subtly sabotaging the development of the massive Flying Eye to repurpose it as a weaponized . The , equipped with doomsday devices powered by harnessing the minds of scientists, served as Hastor's platform to sacrifice on an Altar of and unleash chaos to bend the world to his will. In winter , as tensions escalated with the impending U.S. entry into the war, Hastor activated his plan, launching the toward key American targets and abducting to complete the ritual. This scheme directly echoed his ancient murder of and Chay-Ara with an Nth metal knife, though the modern conflict was ignited when Hall, an , uncovered a similar Nth metal blade during an Egyptian dig, triggering visions of their shared past lives and alerting him to Hastor's threat. Hawkman, empowered by Nth metal artifacts that granted flight and anti-gravity properties, boarded the Flying Eye to rescue Hawkgirl and dismantle Hastor's machinery. In a fierce aerial battle, Hawkman destroyed the zeppelin's core devices, disrupting Hastor's ritual and forcing him to flee temporarily. The confrontation culminated on the astral plane, where the spirits of Khufu and Chay-Ara overpowered Hath-Set's essence, using the Nth metal knife to sever his influence and render Hastor's body comatose. Though physically defeated in this incarnation, Hath-Set's soul endured due to the Thanagarian curse, ensuring his return in future lives. This event, detailed in All-Star Squadron #12 (August 1982), marked Hath-Set's first major clash as a Golden Age supervillain against the Justice Society of America era heroes.

Involvement with Infinity Inc.

In Infinity Inc. #44 (November 1987), Hath-Set possessed Hector Hall, the son of and (Shiera Sanders Hall), transforming him into the villainous Silver Scarab and using him to launch a direct assault on the team at the ruins of Hall Manor. Hath-Set's control over Hall stemmed from a ritualistic manipulation that exploited the ancient curse tying their reincarnations, allowing Hath-Set to weaponize Hall's mystical armor and summon beast-men guardians to aid the attack. This scheme was driven by Hath-Set's enduring grudge against the Hawkman lineage from their Egyptian origins, aiming to sabotage the emerging generation of heroes by corrupting one of their own. The Infinity Inc. members, including Northwind, confronted the possessed Silver Scarab and Hath-Set, uncovering that Hall's body was already deceased and inhabited by an inhuman entity. Through a combination of Northwind's Atlantean spells and the intervention of a preserved sliver of Hall's soul, the team performed an that expelled Hath-Set's influence and disrupted their superweapon, the , but at the cost of Hall's physical death as his body crumbled to dust. In subsequent issues, such as Infinity Inc. #50 (1988), Hall's soul was resurrected and transmigrated into a new form, becoming the new in service to .

Possession of Helene Astar

In the Hawkgirl series (vol. 2) #50–66, published from May 2006 to September 2007, Hath-Set possessed the body of archaeologist Helene Astar, exploiting her expertise to excavate Nth Metal artifacts buried across ancient sites. These artifacts, central to the Hawks' powers and history, were unearthed to fuel Hath-Set's ritualistic schemes aimed at perpetuating the curse that bound him, , and in endless reincarnation. Through Astar's form, Hath-Set orchestrated targeted assaults on Kendra Saunders (), drawing her into traps that combined archaeological digs with mystical ambushes. Hath-Set's possession enabled sophisticated psychological manipulation, as he weaponized shared memories from past lives to erode Hawkgirl's resolve. By invoking visions of their ancient Egyptian origins—where Hath-Set murdered Prince Khufu and Chay-Ara— he forced Kendra to relive fragmented recollections of betrayal and loss, blurring her modern identity with echoes of Shiera Hall and other incarnations. These tactics intensified during skirmishes, where Hath-Set taunted her with the inevitability of their cycle, briefly alluding to the ongoing that doomed them to repeated conflict. Battles unfolded in shadowed ruins and urban hideouts, with Hawkgirl wielding her Nth Metal mace against Astar's possessed form, which demonstrated enhanced strength and occult prowess derived from the villain's essence. As the arc built to its climax, revelations during prolonged confrontations exposed how Hath-Set's control over Astar wavered at times, allowing glimpses of her original personality and hinting at the possession's parasitic nature. Hawkman (Carter Hall) intervened in later issues, providing strategic support and amplifying the emotional stakes through their reunited bond. The use of excavated Nth Metal amplified both sides' abilities, turning fights into tests of willpower as much as combat skill. The arc concluded in Hawkgirl #66, with and storming Hath-Set's sanctum amid a invoking his mummified lineage. Chay-Ara's ancient consciousness surged within , granting her the resolve to counter Hath-Set's ka energy regeneration and sever his arm in a decisive clash. disrupted the by incinerating key artifacts, weakening the possession. then bisected the possessed body, expelling Hath-Set's spirit and causing Helene Astar's death, thereby temporarily halting this incarnation of the eternal foe and granting the Hawks a fragile peace.

Alliance with Khea

During the Brightest Day crossover event spanning 2010–2011, Hath-Set reincarnated in the remote jungles of , where he forged a strategic alliance with Queen Khea, also known as the and the mother of (Shiera Sanders Hall) from an ancient incarnation. This partnership was driven by their mutual desire to harness the white energy of life—unleashed following the —to shatter the endless reincarnation cycle that had ensnared Hath-Set, , and Hawkgirl for millennia. Khea, having survived her own death through mystical means tied to Thanagarian and Earthly lore, provided Hath-Set with access to interdimensional gateways and her command over Nth metal, amplifying their plot to achieve permanent freedom from resurrection. The duo's scheme escalated into a coordinated on and , whom they lured to Hawkworld—a parallel dimension under Khea's influence—through deceptive visions and kidnappings. Utilizing ancient Egyptian rituals infused with white energy, Hath-Set and Khea constructed a sacrificial gate from the skeletal remains of the heroes' prior incarnations, intending to channel the life force to empower an army of monstrous hawk-beasts and sever the reincarnation curse once and for all. They armed themselves with Nth metal weapons and artifacts, exploiting the metal's anti-gravitational and mystical properties to ensnare Hawkgirl in a ritualistic binding and overwhelm with waves of alien enforcers loyal to Khea. This attack represented a rare collaborative villainy for Hath-Set, contrasting his earlier solitary possessions like that of Helene Astar, as it leveraged Khea's royal authority for cosmic-scale disruption. The alliance culminated in defeat during the events of Brightest Day #13 (January 2011), amid a brutal confrontation on Hawkworld. After Khea was slain in the fray—her body consumed by the unstable gateway she sought to control—Hawkgirl broke free and engaged Hath-Set directly, ultimately killing him by snapping his neck in a moment of raw vengeance that disrupted their ritual and scattered the hawk-beast horde. This victory temporarily halted Hath-Set's reincarnations and the cycle's momentum, though the white energy's full implications lingered in the broader DC Universe narrative.

DC Rebirth era

In the DC Rebirth continuity, Hath-Set's backstory was expanded in Dark Days: The Forge #1 (2017), revealing his origins as a prehistoric who founded the —also known as the —after encountering a time-displaced Batman following the events of . This schism within the ancient positioned Hath-Set as a worshipper of the bat-god , setting the stage for his eternal antagonism toward the avatars and tying into the broader multiversal lore of the Dark Nights: Metal event. Hath-Set's arc reached its climax in the Hawkman series' final storyline, spanning issues #27–29 (November 2020–January 2021), where he as the archaeologist Anton Hester in a bid to break the cycle. Intent on ending the curse that bound him to the Hawks across lifetimes, Hath-Set confronted Carter Hall () and Kendra Saunders () with the original Nth metal dagger used in , believing it would grant him victory by slaying them permanently. However, after sacrificed himself to protect , the cycle unexpectedly shattered for all involved, leaving Hath-Set isolated without his eternal foes or purpose; in despair, he took his own life with the dagger. As of November 2025, Hath-Set has made no appearances in the era (2021 onward) or imprint, suggesting a potential definitive conclusion to his role in the mythos.

Powers and abilities

Reincarnation and immortality

Hath-Set's immortality stems from an ancient tied to the Nth metal, originating in when he, as a priest, murdered Prince and Princess Chay-Ara with a dagger forged from the mystical metal. This act, empowered by the Nth metal's properties combined with Hath-Set's dark magic, bound the souls of all three individuals—Khufu, Chay-Ara, and Hath-Set himself—to an eternal cycle of death and across millennia. The curse ensures Hath-Set's soul persists indefinitely, granting him a form of supernatural longevity that transcends physical death. Upon the death of a host body, Hath-Set's soul transfers to a new vessel, often a descendant or compatible individual, allowing him to reincarnate in various eras and forms while retaining fragmented memories of his past lives. These memories, though incomplete, enable him to recognize his ancient foes—reincarnations of (Hawkman) and Chay-Ara ()—and pursue them relentlessly, perpetuating a cosmic conflict driven by vengeance and the curse's inexorable pull. The Nth metal's influence facilitates this process, sometimes restoring fuller recollections through contact with artifacts, which Hath-Set exploits to maintain his malevolent agenda across lifetimes. The cycle, including Hath-Set's , serves as an unending engine of antagonism between him and the Hawks, with each rebirth drawing the trio into renewed clashes that echo their Egyptian origins. This eternal pursuit was finally disrupted in a 2020 confrontation in (2018) #29, where and Hawkwoman confronted and defeated Hath-Set, revealing that the perceived curse was illusory—stemming from fear rather than the Nth metal dagger—and ending the cycle by overcoming that fear, thus terminating the forced reincarnations for all involved. With the cycle ended, Hath-Set's via was severed, leaving him vulnerable to permanent and halting the perpetual cycle of conflict.

Combat and mystical skills

Hath-Set demonstrates proficiency in ancient Egyptian weaponry, specializing in daggers, spears, and tools augmented by Nth metal to enhance their cutting and mystical properties. In his inaugural confrontation, he employed an Nth metal dagger with lethal precision to strike down his rivals, showcasing tactical acumen in ambush tactics. This expertise extends to , where he adapts ancient techniques to counter modern adversaries, including aerial maneuvers against airships and defenses against energy-based assaults in later incarnations. As a of Setekh, Hath-Set wields extensive sorcery derived from his theological , enabling possessions, illusions, and elaborate rituals. His magical includes control over groups to incite obedience or chaos, as seen when he compelled a mob through incantations. He performs transformative rituals to alter forms, such as converting allies into mythical beings like the phoenix Bennu, and constructs portals using arcane components like bones for interdimensional travel. These abilities facilitate strategic alliances, where rituals summon elemental forces like sandstorms to disorient and capture foes during combat.

In other media

Animation

Hath-Set first appeared in animated media in the episode "," which aired on April 29, 2006, as part of the series' third season (2004–2006). In this story, he is portrayed as an ancient Egyptian who, driven by jealousy, orchestrates the deaths of Khufu (the original ) and Chay-Ara (the original ) by poisoning their wine, initiating their eternal cycle of and rivalry. Voiced by Hector Elizondo, Hath-Set serves as a reincarnated foe central to and 's backstory, with the episode exploring the tragic origins of their bond and ongoing conflict in a flashback-heavy . Hath-Set later featured in the (2019) web series episode "#TheBirdAndTheBee," which premiered on September 27, 2020. Here, he is depicted as a jackal-themed warrior with an Anubis-like , Egyptian cape, and makeup, embodying a power-hungry who disrupts romantic pursuits to perpetuate his vendetta against . Voiced by Sean Rohani, Hath-Set targets during a event, attempting to prevent his relationship with (Shiera Sanders) in a comedic yet antagonistic role that highlights his role as an eternal enemy. The episode simplifies the character's ancient origins into a teen-oriented conflict, focusing on themes of destiny and interference. Across these adaptations, Hath-Set's portrayals emphasize his reincarnation-based rivalry with Hawkman and Hawkgirl, streamlined for television by condensing centuries of comic lore into self-contained episodes that prioritize emotional drama and action over intricate historical details._Episode:_Ancient_History)

Other adaptations

Hath-Set has seen limited adaptations in live-action media and other formats beyond comics and animation. In the Arrowverse television series DC's Legends of Tomorrow (2016–2022), the character's origin is merged with that of Vandal Savage, portrayed by Casper Crump, who is depicted as the ancient Egyptian priest Hath-Set responsible for the original murders of Khufu and Chay-Ara, initiating their eternal reincarnation cycle and his own immortality. This adaptation alters Savage's traditional backstory to incorporate Hath-Set's role as the instigator of the Hawks' curse, serving as the primary antagonist in the show's first season. Hath-Set does not appear in major DC Extended Universe films, including Black Adam (2022), which featured Hawkman but omitted the villain. In video games, Hath-Set receives minor references in titles like DC Universe Online (2011), where he is described in the lore of Hawkman and Hawkgirl as the priest who murdered their ancient Egyptian incarnations with an Nth metal dagger. Similarly, in the mobile game DC Legends (2016), Hath-Set is referenced in Hawkgirl's backstory and appears as an antagonistic figure tied to the reincarnation theme.) No significant adaptations of Hath-Set exist as of 2025, with his appearances confined primarily to graphic novels such as : Hath-Set (2008), which collects comic issues rather than original narrative prose.

References

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