ARGONAUTS
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The
ARGONAUTS fit in a speaking timber from the oak of
Dodona in the prow of the 'Argo'
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"A certain king,
vehemently longing to drive this man far from his
fatherland and possessions, because in might he
outshone all the sons of
Aeolus, sends him to voyage hither on a
bootless venture; and asserts that the stock of
Aeolus will not escape the heart-grieving
wrath and rage of implacable
Zeus, nor the umbearable curse and
vengeance due for Phrixus, until the fleece comes
back to Hellas." [Argus 4 to
Aeetes. Apollonius
Rhodius,
Argonautica
3.333]
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The ARGONAUTS are those who sailed to Colchis in
order to bring the Golden Fleece of the Ram that
Phrixus 1 had dedicated to
Ares at Colchis. The
ARGONAUTS, with Jason as
admiral, put to sea from Iolcus, and after several
adventures came to Colchis, fetched the Golden
Fleece, and came back with the king's daughter,
Medea, whom
Jason married.
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How the Golden Fleece came to Colchis
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Athamas 1, first
Boeotian and then Thessalian king, was married to
Nephele 2 and had by her a son Phrixus 1 and a
daughter Helle. But he married a second wife Ino,
who plotted against the children of Nephele 2 by
secretely sabotaging the crops. When she succeeded
in having the whole country suffering from dearth,
Athamas 1 sent
messengers to Delphi to
inquire how they might be delivered from the
calamity. Ino then persuaded the messengers to
falsify the oracle and say that it had been
foretold that the dearth would cease if Phrixus 1
and Helle were sacrificed. Being warned of the
danger, Nephele 2 put her children on the back of
the Ram with the Golden Fleece, which she had
received from Hermes, and
flying on it they escaped. Helle slipped into the
sea and was drowned in the Hellespont (the strait
dividing the Thracian Chersonese from Asia Minor),
but Phrixus 1 reached Colchis, at the eastern end
of the Black Sea, where he sacrificed the amazing
ram and gave the Golden Fleece to
Aeetes, who nailed it to
an oak, where it was guarded by a sleepless Dragon.
This is how the Golden Fleece, which the
ARGONAUTS later
fetched, came to Colchis.
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Fear of competitors leads to famous expedition
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Now, there is nothing so cherished by some men
of power than power itself, and King
Pelias 1 of Iolcus,
being no exception in this regard, once consulted
the oracle concerning the kingdom, and, to his
distress, he was warned by it to beware of the man
with the single sandal. At first, the king did not
understand whom the oracle was referring to, but
afterwards, when he was about to offer a sacrifice
to Poseidon, he sent
for Jason, among many
others, to participate in it.
Jason came to the
sacrifice, but in crossing the river Anaurus in
Thessaly he lost a sandal in the stream and
appeared with only one. When
Pelias 1 saw him, he
remembered the oracle, and asked
Jason what would he do if
he were king and had received an oracle that he
should be murdered by a certain citizen.
Jason answered:
"I would
command him to bring the Golden Fleece."
[Jason to
Pelias 1. Apollodorus,
Library
1.9.16]
Some say that he answered thus inspired by
Hera, who being angry
against Pelias 1 because
he, some time ago, had violated her sanctuary by
killing his stepmother Sidero, who had taken refuge
there, wished Medea to
prove a curse to Pelias
1. And that came to be, because when
Pelias 1 heard
Jason's answer, he bade
him go in quest of the Golden Fleece. But
Jason brought
Medea, and she was the end
of this anxious king.
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The "Argo"
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Jason assembled many
noble men from Hellas, and with the help of one
Argus, some say son of Phrixus 1 (but see list
below), a ship of fifty oars called "Argo" was
built. At its prow, a speaking timber from the oak
of Dodona was fitted, following the instructions of
Athena. It is said that
when the ship was launched into the sea, it
appeared among the stars from rudder to sail
[Constellation Puppis].
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Athena supervises the
building of the 'Argo'. The yard is held
by the helmsman Tiphys; Argus (3 or 4)
sits across the stern
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Kingdom of women
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In their way to Colchis, the ARGONAUTS came
first to the island of
Lemnos, where the women
had killed their fathers and husbands and lived
without men, except for Hypsipyle, their queen, who
had secretly saved her father. But this exception
was not public yet, and later, when it was known,
the women of Lemnos sold
their own queen into slavery. Years later, the army
of the SEVEN AGAINST
THEBES met Hypsipyle in Nemea, where she was in
charge of the little prince Opheltes 1 as his
nurse. But in Lemnos,
Jason fell in love with
Hypsipyle and had children by her. One of them,
Euneus 1, became later king of
Lemnos, and is known for
having sent ships from the island with cargoes of
wine for the Achaeans
during the Trojan War.
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War by mistake
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Having left Lemnos,
the ARGONAUTS engaged by mistake in a battle
against the Dolionians and killed their king, who
had previously received them as guests:
King Cyzicus ruled an island in the Propontis.
He received the ARGONAUTS with generous
hospitality, but when they had left him, they were
brought unaware to the same island by a storm that
arose during the night. Cyzicus, thinking they were
Pelasgian enemies, attacked them on the shore at
night, and in the battle that ensued he was killed
by Jason, or perhaps by
Heracles 1. By day,
when they realised what they had done, they mourned
and gave Cyzicus a costly burial
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Hylas and
Heracles 1 lost for
the expedition
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Having come to Mysia, the ARGONAUTS lost
Hylas, who was ravished
away by NYMPHS.
Hylas, a lover of
Heracles 1, was a
young man famous for his beauty, which is also why
the NYMPHS carried him
off. This happened when
Hylas went to fetch water,
while Heracles 1
cooked for the rest of the ARGONAUTS. When
Hylas did not return
Heracles 1 went to the
woods to look for him, and as he cried his name
"Hylas,
Hylas,
Hylas ...", the
NYMPHS, fearing to be
catched by him, transformed
Hylas into an echo, so
that when Heracles 1
cried his name he would hear back
"Hylas,
Hylas,
Hylas ..."
Some say that Heracles
1, looking for Hylas,
never joined his companions again. But then there
are also those who say that
Heracles 1 never
sailed with the ARGONAUTS, explaining that at the
time he served as a slave at the court of Omphale.
Still others say that
Heracles 1 was left in
Thessaly because the "Argo" declared with its human
voice that she could not bear his weight.
But yet others say that
Heracles 1 left
another Argonaut, Polyphemus 1, in charge of
looking for Hylas, and
himself went back to the ship. According to them,
Polyphemus 1 remained in Mysia for good, founding a
city Cius, which he ruled as king. He kept looking
for Hylas until his death,
but Hylas was never found
again.
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The Bebrycians
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Next the ARGONAUTS came then to the land of the
Bebrycians, where King Amycus 1, a son of Poseidon
and Melie, a Bithynian Nymph, compelled strangers
to box as a way of killing them. However this time
he was killed by
Polydeuces.
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Phineus 2 and the
HARPIES
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Thence they put to sea and came to the court of
Phineus 2, king and
seer from Salmydessus in Thrace who had lost the
sight of both eyes. He is variously alleged to have
been blinded by the gods for foretelling men the
future, or by Boreas 1 and
the ARGONAUTS because he blinded his own sons at
the instigation of their stepmother, or by
Poseidon, because he
revealed to the children of Phrixus 1 how they
could sail from Colchis to Hellas. The gods also
sent the HARPIES to him. These were winged female
creatures, and when a table was laid for
Phineus 2, they flew
down from the sky and snatched up the food, and
what little they left stank so that nobody could
eat it. But the ARGONAUTS chased the HARPIES away,
and being rid of them,
Phineus 2 revealed to
the ARGONAUTS the course of their voyage, and
advised them about the Clashing Rocks in the sea.
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The Clashing Rocks
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These rocks were huge cliffs wrapped in mist,
which, dashing against each other by the force of
the winds, closed the sea passage making it
impossible even for the birds to pass between them.
Phineus 2 told the
ARGONAUTS to let fly a dove between the rocks, and
to watch if it passed safe through. Later they came
to the place and released a dove, and when the
rocks had recoiled after the bird had passed, they
rowed hard and passed through. From that time the
Clashing Rocks stand still because it was fated
that they should come to rest completely once a
ship had made the passage.
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The HARPIES and the sons of Boreas 1 (North
Wind)
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Some say that the two sons of Boreas 1, the
Argonauts Zetes and Calais, who had wings on head
and feet, pursued the HARPIES through the air. It
is told that it was fated that the HARPIES should
perish by the hand of these brothers, and that they
should die when they could not catch up a fugitive.
Yet it is not clear what finally happened to the
HARPIES. Some affirm that they all died but one,
but others assert that they suffered no harm,
having sworn an oath that they would not wrong
Phineus 2 any more.
Similarly, it is not clear what happened to
Zetes and Calais. Some say that they died when
chasing the HARPIES, but others affirm that they
were later (after the return of the ARGONAUTS, and
after the death of King
Pelias 1) killed by
Heracles 1, because
they had persuaded the ARGONAUTS to leave him
behind in Mysia.
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Death of two ARGONAUTS
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In the land of the Mariandynians, they were
hospitably received by King Lycus 3 who was
grateful because the ARGONAUTS had killed his enemy
Amycus 1.
On a later occasion,
Heracles 1 came to the
court of Lycus 3 and helped him in a battle between
him and the king of the Bebrycians, killing (among
others) King Mygdon, brother of Amycus 1. As a
result of this war, Lycus 3 annexed Bebrycian
territories and called them Heraclea.
Here died Idmon 2, the seer, of a wound
inflicted by a boar, and Tiphys, of a short
illness.
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Colchis
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After having sailed past the Thermodon and the
Caucasus, they arrived to Colchis, which was ruled
by King Aeetes, the man
who had received from Phrixus 1 the Golden Fleece.
When the ARGONAUTS arrived,
Jason met
Aeetes and invited him to
give him the Golden Fleece.
Aeetes promised to give
it if single-handed he would yoke the brazen-footed
bulls (a gift he had received from
Hephaestus), and with
them sowed the Dragon's teeth (for he had got from
Athena half of the
dragon's teeth which
Cadmus sowed in
Thebes).
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The king's daughter helps the handsome hero
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While Jason was trying
to figure up how to perform these capricious tasks,
Medea, who was the king's
daughter and a priestess of
Hecate, fell in love with
him. The girl then proposed him the following
secret: she promised to help him to yoke the bulls
and to give him the Golden Fleece, if he would
marry her and take her with him to Hellas. And
since ambition may give birth to any kind of
promises to attain its aims,
Jason swore to do so, and
Medea gave him a drug to
anoint his body, spear and shield with, which would
protect him for one day against fire and iron, when
he was about to yoke the bulls.
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The king has no respect for his own word
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Medea also anticipated
that, when the teeth were sown, armed men would
spring up from the ground against him, and that he
should throw stones into their midst from a
distance, so that they would fight each other, and
that while they were busy in the fight he could
draw near and kill them.
So Jason, anointed with
the miraculous drug, yoke the bulls, and having
sown the Dragon's teeth, killed the warriors that
came up from the ground, following
Medea's instructions.
However, Aeetes, who
had apparently proposed these tasks only hoping for
Jason's destruction, was
not willing to give up the Golden Fleece, and
started to plan the burning of the "Argo" and the
destruction of its crew.
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Medea helps
Jason once more
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But Medea brought
Jason by night to the the
place where the Golden Fleece hang, and put to
sleep by her drugs the Dragon that guarded it. And
while the dragon was asleep, the ARGONAUTS took the
Golden Fleece, and having come to the ship, they
sailed away by night in a hurry.
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While Medea puts the Dragon
to sleep, Jason , followed by
Orpheus , takes the
Golden Fleece
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Pursuit
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King Aeetes started
off in pursuit of the ARGONAUTS, but could not
overtake them. During the ARGONAUTS' flight from
Colchis, Medea killed or
took part in the murder of her brother Apsyrtus,
who also was on board. It is sometimes said that
Medea cut his brother limb
from limb and threw the pieces into the sea and
that, gathering Apsyrtus' limbs,
Aeetes fell behind in the
pursuit. But some say that it was
Jason who cut Apsyrtus
into pieces, or that he was treacherously killed by
Jason (with
Medea's help), on an
island in the mouth of the river Ister [Danube].
According to some, King Styrus of Albania, who
had come to Colchis to marry
Medea at the time when the
ARGONAUTS arrived in the country, joined
Aeetes in the pursuit,
but drowned in the course of it.
Because of his son's death, King
Aeetes returned to
Colchis, but he sent many others to search for the
ARGONAUTS, threatening that, if they did not bring
his daughter back to him, they should suffer the
punishment due to her.
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The "Argo" speaks
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In the meanwhile, because of the horrendous
crime they had committed, the ARGONAUTS were driven
out of course by means of the storms that
Zeus sent. The "Argo" then
spoke and said that they should seek purification
with Circe, a witch living
on the island called Aeaea, where they arrived,
following the ship's words, after having sailed
through the Sardinian and Tyrrhenian seas.
The witch Circe, who
purified the ARGONAUTS for the murder of Apsyrtus,
is sometimes said to be the daughter of
Helius. But some affirm
that she was the daughter of
Aeetes by
Hecate. Years later
Circe received
Odysseus and his
comrades during their return from
Troy. And when she had
given Odysseus'
comrades a potion and they had drunk it off, she
smote them with her wand, and having transformed
them into swines, she put them in the sties.
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The SIRENS
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When the ARGONAUTS had been purified by
Circe, they sailed past
the SIRENS, and
Orpheus, by chanting a
counter melody restrained all of them but Butes 1,
who swam off to the
SIRENS. However he was
saved by Aphrodite,
who carried him away and settled him in Lilybaeum
(Sicily). This favourite of the goddess had two
children by her, Eryx 1 and Polycaon 2. Eryx 1
became later king over the Elymi in Italy, but was
killed by Heracles 1
for the sake of a bull.
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Marriage
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Having received help from the
NEREIDS in order to
avoid the danger of Scylla
1 and Charybdis,
and still fleeing the Colchians, the ARGONAUTS came
to Corcyra, said to be the land of the
Phaeacians. Here the
Colchians catched up, and having landed, they
demanded that King Alcinous give up
Medea. He answered that he
would do so if Medea had
not slept with Jason, but
that in other case he would give her to
Jason. But Queen Arete,
anticipating matters, married
Medea to
Jason in the cave of
Macris.
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Back home
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In their way back to Iolcus, the ARGONAUTS came
to Crete, where
Medea destroyed the brazen
man Talos 1, and having
sailed between Euboea and Locris, they finally came
to Iolcus. The whole trip, they say, was completed
in four months.
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Jason's family
decimated
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In the meantime, King
Pelias 1, still worried
about his throne, caused
Jason's parents to die.
Aeson, father of Jason
(and according to some brother of
Pelias 1), threatened to
death by the king, drank freely of a bull's blood
and died. Some tell that Aeson's wife and
Jason's mother was
Alcimede 1, but others say Polymede, and still
others Amphinome 2. Whoever was Aeson's wife, she
died on the occasion, by drinking the bull's blood,
or by hanging herself, or by the sword. But before
dying, she uttered a curse against King
Pelias 1. Also Promachus
2, Jason's brother, died
together with his parents; some say he drank the
bull's blood, but others affirm that
Pelias 1 personally
killed him.
It has also been told that Aeson was restored to
youth by Medea, but his
death, after this rejuvenation has never been
reported.
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Death of Pelias 1
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On his return, Jason
surrendered the Golden Fleece as it had been
agreed, and travelling to the Isthmus of
Corinth, he dedicated
the "Argo" to Poseidon.
Having fixed these practical details, he asked
Medea, the woman who could
solve all his troubles, to devise how he could
punish Pelias 1.
So Medea went to the
palace of Pelias 1, and
persuaded his daughters to make mincemeat of their
father and boil him, by promising them to make him
young again by her drugs. When
Pelias 1 was dead,
Acastus, the king's son and one of the ARGONAUTS,
became king, and having buried his father, or what
was left of him, he expelled
Jason and
Medea from Iolcus.
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Young princess better than foreign witch
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Jason and
Medea settled in
Corinth, where they
lived happily for ten years. Later however,
Jason started to feel that
a younger princess would make a more
"representative wife" than a foreign witch. So he
decided to marry the king's daughter and divorce
his wife. When Medea
discovered that, although being
Jason's benefactress, she
was treated with scorn, she decided to take
vengeance. So with the help of poisonous drugs, she
made a golden crown and bade her sons give it as a
gift to their stepmother. When this was done, she
killed her own sons and fled to
Athens.
Some say that the young princess Glauce 4 took
the gift, being burned to death along with
Jason and Creon 3, her
father. But others affirm that
Jason, unable to endure
the loss of both wife and children, killed himself.
Still others say that
Medea foretold him a foul
death: the wreckage of the Argo would fall upon
Jason and kill him.
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Medea back in Colchis
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Medea came to
Athens but later, having
plotted against Theseus,
she was driven from the city. She, then, returned
to Colchis, and finding that
Aeetes had been deposed
by his brother, Perses 3, she killed her uncle, and
restored the kingdom to her father.
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List of ARGONAUTS
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Acastus, son of
Pelias 1, joined the
ARGONAUTS against his will. After his father's
death he became king of Iolcus and expelled
Jason and
Medea from the city. He
purified Peleus for
having killed Eurytion 2 and received him in his
home; but his wife Astydamia 3 fell in love with
Peleus, and as he refused
her she intrigued against him, telling Acastus that
Peleus had attempted to
seduce her. Acastus would not kill the man he had
purified, but took him to hunt on Mount Pelion; and
when Peleus had fallen
asleep Acastus deserted him, hiding his sword. On
arising and looking for his sword,
Peleus was caught by the
CENTAURS and would have
perished, had he not been saved by
Chiron. Acastus' mother
is sometimes called Anaxibia 2, and at other times
Phylomache. Anaxibia 2 is daughter of Bias 1, son
of Amythaon 1, son of Cretheus 1, son of
Aeolus 1. Phylomache is
said to be daughter of
Amphion 1 and Niobe 2,
the mother of the
NIOBIDS. Acastus' wife
was either Astydamia 3, or Hippolyte 5, and by one
of them he had daughters: Sterope 5, Sthenele 2,
and Laodamia 2. Sthenele 2 married Menoetius 2 and
had a son Patroclus
1. Laodamia 2 married Protesilaus and killed
herself when he died at
Troy. Acastus is also
counted among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Apd.1.9.10, 1.9.27, 3.13.1-3, 3.13.8;
Arg.1.20ff.; Eur.Tro.1128; Hyg.Fab.24, 104;
Ov.Met.8.299ff.; Pin.Nem.5.27ff.; Val.1.485,
1.695ff.].
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Actor 2. Son of Hippasus 2 [Apd.1.9.16].
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Admetus 1. King of Pherae in Thessaly,
whom Apollo served as a
thrall for having killed the
CYCLOPES.
Apollo obtained from the
MOERAE that they should
accept in ransom for the life of Admetus 1 the life
of whosoever would consent to die in his stead.
However, when this was known, nobody would promise
to be his ransom on the day of his death with the
exception of Alcestis,
his wife [see Alcestis]
[Apd.1.8.2, 1.9.15-16, 3.10.4; Apd.Ep.3.14;
Dio.4.53.2; Eur.Alc.392, 1120, and passim;
Hyg.Fab.50; Lib.Met.23; Stat.Theb.5.435;
Val.1.445].
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Aethalides 1. The herald of the
ARGONAUTS. He was son of
Hermes and Eupolemia
[Arg.1.641; Hyg.Fab.14; Val.1.437].
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Amphiaraus.
See also SEVEN AGAINST
THEBES and Robe &
Necklace of Harmonia 1.
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Amphidamas 2. An Arcadian, son of King
Aleus and Cleobule 1 [Arg.1.161; Hyg.Fab.14;
Val.1.376].
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Amphion 2. A Macedonian from Pella, son
of Hyperasius and Hypso [Hyg.Fab.14; Val.1.367].
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Ancaeus 1. Son of King Lycurgus 2 of
Arcadia. See also
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Apd.1.8.2, 1.9.16, 3.9.2, 3.10.7-8;
Hyg.Fab.248; Pau.8.4.10, 8.5.2].
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Ancaeus 2. King of Samos [Hyg.Fab.14, 81;
Pau.7.4.1; Val.1.413].
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Argus 2. Son either of Polybus 1 and
Argia 2, or of Danaus 3 [Hyg.Fab.14].
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Argus 3. Builder of the Argo. Son of
Phrixus 1, son of Athamas
1, and of Chalciope 2, daughter of
Aeetes. Argus 3 married
Perimele 2, daughter of Admetus 1 and
Alcestis [AO.861;
Apd.1.9.1, 1.9.16; Hes.GE.15; Hyg.Fab.21;
Lib.Met.23; Val.5.460].
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Argus 4. Like Argus 3, said to be the
builder of the Argo. Argus 4 was son of Arestor 2
[Arg.1.111; Val.1.93, 1.314, 1.477].
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Arius 1. Son of King Bias 1 of
Argos and Pero 2, daughter
of Neleus [Arg.1.118].
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Ascalaphus 1. See
ACHAEAN LEADERS.
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Asclepius.
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Asterion 5 (Asterius 8) from Pellene, a
city in eastern Achaea,
was son either of Hyperasius of Hypso, or of
Antigona, or of Hippasus 3. Antigona was daughter
of Pheres 1, son of Cretheus 1, son of
Aeolus 1 [see also
Asterius 1] [AO.217; Arg.1.176; Hyg.Fab.14;
Val.1.367].
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Asterius 1 (Asterion 1). A man from
Piresia, city in Thessaly at the foot of Mount
Phylleus. He was son either of Cometes 1, or of
Hyperasius [see also Asterion 5] [AO.163;
Apd.1.9.16; Arg.1.35; Hyg.Fab.14; Pau.5.17.9;
Val.1.355].
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Atalanta.
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Augeas. This is the king of
Elis who had many herds of
cattle and whose stables
Heracles 1 cleansed,
thus accomplishing one of the
Labours that
were imposed on him by
Eurystheus, who later
did not admit this labour alleging that
Heracles 1 had been
hired by Augeas since the latter promised him one
tenth of his cattle if he would carry out the dung
in one day. However, when the task was accomplished
and Augeas learned that it had been done at
Eurystheus' command,
he not only refused to pay but also denied that he
had promised it. For this reason arbitrators were
called; and during the trial Augeas' son Phyleus 1
witnessed against his father. So Augeas, without
awaiting the verdict, expelled both his son and
Heracles 1 from
Elis. Later
Heracles 1 collected
an Arcadian army and marched against Augeas, who
hearing of the war that
Heracles 1 was
levying, appointed the MOLIONIDES generals of the
Eleans. Some say that Augeas was killed by
Heracles 1, whereas
others say that he died at an advanced age. Augeas
was either the son of
Helius and Nausidame, or
of Poseidon, or of
Phorbas 6, or of Eleius 1, son of
Poseidon and Eurycyda,
daughter of Endymion,
whom Selene loved. His
children are: Epicasta 2, Phyleus 1, Agamede,
Agasthenes, and Eurytus 1 [see
Heracles 1 and
LABOURS]
[Apd.2.5.5, 2.7.2, 2.7.7ff.; Dio.4.33.3;
Hom.Il.11.740; Hyg. Fab.14; Pau.5.1.9, 5.3.3].
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|
Autolycus 1's father
Hermes, they say, gave
him the gift of being such a skilful thief that he
could not be caught, making him able to change
whatever he stole into some other form or colour.
Autolycus 1's mother was either Chione 2 or
Philonis, both daughters of Daedalion, son of
Eosphorus, son of Eos.
Daedalion is sometimes said to be the father of
Autolycus 1. Autolycus 1 married, some say, Neaera
3, daughter of Pereus, son of Elatus 2, son of
Arcas 1, son of Zeus and
Callisto. But others
say that his wife was Amphithea 3, and that he had
by her two daughters: Polymede (mother of
Jason, according to some),
and Anticlia 1, mother of
Odysseus [see also
Sisyphus] [Apd.1.9.16;
Hom.Od.11.85, 19.415; Hyg.Fab.200, 201;
Ov.Met.11.313; Pau.8.4.6; Strab.12.3.11].
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|
Butes 1 came from Attica to join the
ARGONAUTS. He is the one who swam off to the
SIRENS but was carried
away by Aphrodite who
settled him in Lilybaeum (Sicily). The goddess
loved him and they had children: Eryx 1 and
Polycaon 2. Butes 1 was son of Teleon and Zeuxippe
1, daughter of the river god Eridanus [Apd.1.9.25;
Dio.4.23.2; Hyg.Fab.14; Pau.4.2.1; Val.1.394].
|
|
Caeneus 2. Son of the Lapith general
Coronus 1 [Apd.1.9.16; Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Calais. Son of
Boreas 1 (North Wind). He
had wings on head and feet. Calais died while
chasing the HARPIES, or else he was killed by
Heracles 1
[Apd.3.15.2; Hyg. Fab.14, 19; Prop.1.20.26;
Stat.Theb.5.408; Val.1.469].
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|
Canthus 1. Son of Canethus 1, or of Abas
1, son of Poseidon.
Some say that Canthus 1 died wandering in Libya
when he led off Caphaurus' sheep and the latter
killed him with a stone. But others say that he was
slain by Gesander during the war between
Aeetes and Perses 3
[Arg.1.77-80, 4.1485ff.; Val.1.451, 6.317ff.].
|
|
Castor 1. See
DIOSCURI.
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|
Cepheus 2. King of Tegea in
Arcadia, son either of
Aleus or of Lycurgus 2; his mother (Aleus' wife)
could have been either Neaera 3 or Cleobule 1.
Cepheus 2 had children: Sterope 4, Aeropus 2, and
Antinoe 1. He is said to have perished in battle
while helping Heracles
1 against the Lacedaemonians. Cepheus 2 is also
found among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Apd.1.8.2, 2.7.3; Hyg.Fab.14;
Pau.8.5.1, 8.8.4; Val.1.375].
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Clymenus 10. Brother of Iphiclus 1
[Arg.1.45,1.234; Hes.CWE.68.35, 84; Hyg.Fab.14;
Pau.10.29.6; Val.1.370].
|
|
Clytius 1. Son of the Oechalian prince
Eurytus 4 and Antiope 2, daughter of Pylo, son of
Naubolus 4. He is said to have been killed either
by Aeetes or by
Heracles 1. He is
reported to have been among the
SUITORS OF HELEN
[Dio.4.37.5; Hes.CWE.79; Hyg.Fab.14, 81].
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|
Coronus 1. General of the
LAPITHS. He fought
against the Dorians and their king Aegimius 1 and
was killed by Heracles
1. Coronus 1 was son of Caeneus 1, the man who
once was a woman called Caenis, but was turned into
an invulnerable male by
Poseidon. Coronus 1 was
father of Caeneus 2 [see this list above], and
Leonteus 1 [see
ACHAEAN LEADERS]
[Apd.2.7.7; Apd.3.10.8; Dio.4.37.3; Hom.Il.2.746;
Hyg.Fab.14].
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|
Deucalion 2. Son of
Minos 2, either by
Pasiphae, or by Crete 1. He is father of Idomeneus
1, king of Crete at the
time of the Trojan
War, and of Crete 2. If Molus 1 is his son, he
is a bastard one. Deucalion 2 is also counted among
the CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS. It is said that when
Theseus was about to
leave Crete, he joined
battle with the Cretans at the gate of the
Labyrinth and there he slew Deucalion 2 and his
bodyguard [Apd.3.1.2, 3.3.1; Dio.4.60.4;
Hom.Il.13.451; Hyg.Fab.14, 173; Plu.The.19.6].
|
|
Deucalion 4 came from Pella, a city in
Macedonia, to join the ARGONAUTS. He was son of
Hyperasius and Hypso [Hyg.Fab.14; Val.1.367].
|
|
Echion 1. Son of
Hermes and Antianira 1,
daughter of Menetes [see also
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS] [Arg.1.51ff.; Hyg.Fab.14, 173;
Pin.Pyth.4.179; Val.1.440].
|
|
Erginus 2. Son either of
Poseidon, or of
Periclymenus 1, son of
Neleus [Hyg.Fab.14;
Val.1.415].
|
|
Eribotes is son of Teleon. On one
occasion he assisted Oileus 1 when the latter was
wounded by an Stymphalian bird [Arg.1.72, 2.1039;
Val.1.402].
|
|
Euphemus 1 came from Psamathus to join
the ARGONAUTS. He received a magical clod from
Triton and, following a dream, threw it into the
sea originating the island Calliste (Thera), where
his descendants, led by Theras, settled. He was son
of Poseidon, either by
Europe 2 (daughter of Tityus, son of
Zeus and Elare), or by
Mecionice. Euphemus 1 is also counted among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Arg.4.1731ff.; Hes.GE.6; Hyg.Fab.14,
173; Pin.Oly.4.20ff., 4.46; Val.1.365].
|
|
Euryalus 1. See
ACHAEAN LEADERS.
|
|
Eurydamas 2. Son of Demonassa 1, either
by Irus 1 or by Ctimenus [Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Eurymedon 1. Son of
Dionysus 2 and
Ariadne [Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Eurytion 2. This is the king of Phthia,
who purified Peleus and
gave him the third part of the country, along with
his daughter Antigone 1. Eurytion 2, also counted
among the ARGONAUTS,
was son either of Actor 1 (son of Myrmidon and
Pisidice 1, daughter of
Aeolus 1), or of Irus 1
and Demonassa 1. He was killed during the
Calydonian Hunt by
Peleus, as they say
undesignedly [Apd.1.8.2, 3.13.1; Arg.1.74;
Hyg.Fab.14; Lib.Met.38; Val.1.378].
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|
Eurytus 2. Son of
Hermes and Antianira 1
[Hyg.Fab.14, 160, 173; Pin.Pyth.4.179; Val.1.439].
|
|
Heracles 1.
|
|
|
Hippalcimus 1. Son of
Pelops 1 and Hippodamia
3 [Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Hylas.
|
|
|
Ialmenus 1. Brother of Ascalaphus 1 [see
above]. Ialmenus 1 is also counted among the
SUITORS OF HELEN,
the ACHAEAN
LEADERS and among those who hid inside the
WOODEN HORSE
[Apd.1.9.16, 3.10.8; Hom.Il.2.494ff.; Hyg.Fab.97;
QS.12.314ff.].
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|
Idas 2. Prince of
Messenia. Idas 2 and
his brother Lynceus 1 came from
Messenia and are known
for having opposed the
DIOSCURI; he is said to
have killed Castor 1, being himself slain by the
latter's brother Polydeuces. Idas 2 was son of
Arene, either by
Poseidon or by Aphareus
1, son of King Perieres 1 of
Messenia. Idas 2
married Marpessa 1, daughter of Evenus 2, and had
by her a daughter Cleopatra 4, who was
Meleager's wife. [see
also CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS, and
DIOSCURI] [Apd.1.8.2,
3.10.3, 3.11.2; CYP.1, 12; Hyg.Fab.14, 80;
Stat.Theb.5.405; Val.1.461].
|
|
Idmon 2 died during the voyage of the
ARGONAUTS. Some say he was killed by a boar in the
land of the Mariandynians, people inhabiting an
area of the southern coast of the Black Sea, but
others say he died of disease. Idmon 2 was son of
Cyrene, either by
Apollo or by Abas 3, son
of Melampus 1 [see also
SEERS] [Apd.1.9.23;
Arg.2.815ff.; Hyg.Fab.14, 17, 248; Nonn.38.29;
Val.1.360, 5.2].
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|
Iolaus 1 is the charioteer of
Heracles 1 who shared
with him most of his
LABOURS. He is
also known for as the founder of a colony in
Sardinia. Iolaus 1 is the son of Iphicles
(Heracles 1's
half-brother) and Automedusa, daughter of Alcathous
3, son of Pelops 1.
Iolaus 1 married Heracles
1's ex-wife Megara, and had by her a beautiful
daughter called Leipephilene, wife of Phylas 2, son
of Antiochus 1, son of
Heracles 1. Iolaus 1
is also counted among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Apd.2.5.2, 2.4.11, 2.5.12; Dio.4.29.4;
Eur.Hcl. passim; Hyg.Fab.14, 173; Pau.8.14.9,
9.40.6; Pin.Pyth.11.59].
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|
Iphiclus 1 got his virility restored due
to the manipulations of Melampus 1 (counted among
the SEERS). It is said of
him that he could run over the fruit of the
asphodel and not break it, and that he could run
with his feet upon wheaten ears and not hurt the
fruit. Iphiclus 1 was son of Clymene 3, daughter of
Minyas; his father was
either Phylacus 1 (son of Deion, son of
Aeolus 1), or Cephalus
1, brother of Phylacus 1. By Diomedia he begot
Podarces 2 and Protesilaus (both counted among the
ACHAEAN LEADERS).
Iphiclus 1 was killed in battle fighting against
Hippocoon 2 [Apd.1.9.12; Apd.Ep.3.11.ff.; Arg.1.45,
1.234; Dio.4.33.6; Hes.CWE.68.35, 84;
Hom.Il.2.670ff.; Hyg.Fab.14, 103; Pau.10.29.6;
Val.1.370].
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|
Iphiclus 2 is one of the sons of Thestius
1 (either by Leucippe 1 or by Eurythemis). He
became later one of the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS, and was killed by
Meleager disputing
about the skin of the Calydonian Boar [Apd.1.7.10,
1.8.2; Hyg.Fab.14].
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|
Iphis 6 was killed in battle in Colchis
[Val.1.441, 7.423].
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|
Iphitus 1. It is told that after
Heracles 1 finished
his LABOURS, he
came to Oechalia to compete in archery for the hand
of Iole; he won and yet he was refused the bride by
Eurytus 4 and his sons (except Iphitus 1who said
that Iole should be given to
Heracles 1), on the
ground that he could once more kill his offspring
as he had done to his children by Megara. Shortly
after some cattle were stolen by the notorious
thief Autolycus 1, and
Heracles 1 was held
responsible; but Iphitus 1 did not believe it and,
having gone to meet him, he invited him to seek the
cattle with him. Heracles
1 promised to do so but suddenly he went mad
again and he threw Iphitus 1 from the walls of
Tiryns killing him. It
was Iphitus 1 who gave
Odysseus his well-known
bow. Iphitus 1 was son of Eurytus 4 and Antiope 2
[Apd.2.6.2; Dio.4.31.3; Hes.CWE.79; Hom.Od.21.30;
Hyg.Fab.14; Stat.Theb.5.400].
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|
Iphitus 2 came from Phocis, the region
bordering the Gulf of
Corinth west of Boeotia.
He was son either of Naubolus 1, or of Hippasus 3.
He married Hippolyte 1, and his sons by her,
Schedius 1 and Epistrophus 1, are found among the
ACHAEAN LEADERS
[Apd.3.10.8; Hom.Il.2.518; Hyg.Fab.14, 97;
Stat.Theb.7.354; Val.1.363].
|
|
Jason was the
Captain of the ARGONAUTS.
|
|
|
Lacoon (Laocoon 1). Son of Porthaon,
either by a servant or by Euryte 2 [Arg.1.192;
Hyg.Fab.14; Nonn.13.87].
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|
Laertes. Father of
Odysseus and Ctimene.
His wife was Anticlia 1, daughter of Autolycus 1.
Laertes' father was Arcisius, son of
Zeus, according to some, or
son of Cephalus 1 and
Procris 2, according to
others. Laertes is also found among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Apd.1.9.16; Apd.Ep.3.12;
Hom.Od.15.363; Hyg.Fab.173].
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|
Leitus was either son of Alector 2, or of
Lacritus and Cleobule 2, or of
Gaia, or of Alectryon, son
of Itonus 2, son of Boeotus, son of Itonus 1, son
of Amphictyon, son of
Deucalion 1, the man
who survived the Flood.
Later he became one of the
ACHAEAN LEADERS,
being wounded by Hector
1 at Troy; he is the
only one among the Boeotian chiefs to return home
from the Trojan War.
Leitus is also counted among the
SUITORS OF HELEN
[Apd.1.9.16; 3.10.8; Eur.IA.259; Hom.Il.2.494,
17.605; Hyg.Fab.97; Pau.9.4.3].
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Leodocus. Son of Bias 1 and Pero 2
[Arg.1.118; Val.1.358].
|
|
Lynceus 1, also one of the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS, was famous for his sharpness of sight;
he could even see things under ground. He was son
of Aphareus 1 [see
Messenia] and Arene. He
was brother of Idas 2 and, opposing the
DIOSCURI, he was killed
either by Castor 1 or by Polydeuces. Lynceus 1 died
childless [AO.1188; Apd.1.8.2, 3.10.3, 3.11.2;
CYP.1; Hyg.Fab.14, 80; Pau.4.2.7; Pin.Nem.10.61;
Val.1.462].
|
|
Meleager.
|
|
|
Menoetius 2 fled with his son
Patroclus 1 because
of the death of Clitonymus (whom
Patroclus 1 killed)
and was received by
Peleus. Menoetius 2 was
son of Actor 3, son of Deion, son of
Aeolus 1. His mother was
Aegina, who also had a son
Aeacus by
Zeus. Menoetius 2's wife
was either Philomela 2, or Sthenele 2 (daughter of
Acastus, son of Pelias
1, the king who sent
Jason to fetch the Golden
Fleece), or Periopis (daughter of Pheres 1, son of
Cretheus 1, son of Aeolus
1), or Polymele 1, daughter of
Peleus. By some of them
Menoetius 2 fathered
Patroclus 1
[Apd.3.10.9, 3.13.8; Arg.1.69; Dio.4.38.5;
Hyg.Fab.14, 97; Pin.Oly.9.69; Val.6.343].
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|
Mopsus 1. Son of Ampycus 1 (one of the
SEERS). During the voyage of the ARGONAUTS he was
killed by a serpent while wandering at the furthest
ends of Libya. Yet it is also said that he was
among those who fought against the
CENTAURS at
Pirithous' wedding,
and is also found among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [AO.948; Arg.1.80, 4.1502ff.;
Hes.SH.181; Hyg.Fab.14, 173; Ov.Met.12.456;
Stat.Theb.5.417; Strab.9.5.22; Val.1.384, 3.420].
|
|
Nauplius 1 lived to a great age and to
avenge the death of his son
Palamedes contrived
for the wives of the Achaeans fighting at
Troy to play their husbands
false
(Clytaemnestra
with Aegisthus,
Aegialia, wife of Diomedes
2, with Cometes 2, and Meda 2, wife of King
Idomeneus 1 of Crete, with
Leucus 1). Besides, on the return of the Achaeans,
he, by using false lights led them to shipwreck.
Later, being pursued by the Achaeans, he came as a
suppliant to the Chalcidians in Euboea; but at some
point he died being deluded by a false beacon
light. Nauplius 1 was son of
Poseidon and Amymone 1,
counted among the
DANAIDS. Nauplius 1's
wife was either Clymene 5 (daughter of
Catreus, son of
Minos 2), or Philyra 2 or
Hesione 1. By one of them he had sons:
Palamedes, Oeax,
Nausimedon, and Proetus 1 [Apd.2.1.5;
Apd.Ep.6.7-11; Arg.1.136; Hyg.Fab.14; Plu.GQ.33;
Val.1.372].
|
|
Nauplius 2. Son of Clytoneus 1 and a
descendant of Nauplius 1 [Arg.1.134].
|
|
Neleus. Founder
of Pylos.
|
|
Nestor. Son of
Neleus. See also
ACHAEAN LEADERS.
|
|
|
Oileus 1 was son of Hodoedocus and
Agrianome, daughter of Perseon. He is reported to
have been wounded by one of the Stymphalian Birds.
Oileus 1 married Eriopis 1 and had a son
Ajax 2, but some have said
that both Ajax 2 and Medon
1 (one of the ACHAEAN
LEADERS) were his sons by a concubine Rhene 1
[Arg.2.1037; Hom.Il.2.726, 13.695ff.; Hyg.Fab.14,
97; Val.1.372].
|
|
Orpheus.
|
|
|
Palaemon 1. Son either of
Hephaestus, or of
Aetolus 1, or of Lernus 1 (son of Proetus 1, uncle
of Danae) [Apd.1.9.16;
Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Peleus.
|
|
|
Peneleus. See
ACHAEAN LEADERS.
|
|
Periclymenus 1. Son of
Neleus and Chloris 1, and
father of Erginus 2 and Penthilus 2. Most
descendants of Neleus
perished in the war that
Heracles 1 waged
against Messenia.
Periclymenus 1 had been granted by
Poseidon the power of
changing his shape, and fighting with
Heracles 1 he turned
himself into a lion, a snake and a bee, but he
nevertheless got killed [Apd.1.9.9, 2.7.3;
Arg.1.156; Hyg.Fab.14; Nonn.43.247; Pau.2.18.8;
Val.1.388].
|
|
Phalerus 1. An Athenian, son of Alcon 1
(who once had shot a snake that was threatening to
kill his son) [Arg.1.97; Hyg.Fab.14; Val.1.398].
|
|
Phanus. Son of
Dionysus 2
[Apd.1.9.16].
|
|
Philoctetes.
|
|
|
Phlias. Phliasia near
Sicyon is called after
him. Phlias was son either of
Dionysus 2 and
Ariadne, or of Lycaeus,
or of (according to the Argives, but they are not
trusted) Cisus and Araethyrea. Phlias married
Chthonophyle (also loved by
Hermes) and had by her a
son Androdamas [Arg.1.20ff.; Hyg.Fab14; Pau.2.6.6,
2.12.6; Val.1.412].
|
|
Phocus 1. Son of Caeneus 1, one of the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Pirithous.
|
|
|
Poeas is remembered for having kindled
the pyre of Heracles 1
inheriting his bow. He was son of Thaumacus and
father, by Demonassa 2, of
Philoctetes
[Apd.1.9.16, 2.7.7, 3.10.8; Hyg.Fab.97].
|
|
Polydeuces. See
DIOSCURI.
|
|
Polyphemus 1 was left in Mysia by the
ARGONAUTS and founded there a city Cius where he
reigned as king. For
Heracles 1 and
Polyphemus 1 started a search for
Hylas, who was never seen
again. And as they were busy searching for him,
they were themselves lost for the rest of the
ARGONAUTS, and the ship put to sea without them.
Others have said that
Heracles 1, after
having done the impossible in order to find his
friend, returned and joined the rest of the
ARGONAUTS, but left Polyphemus 1 in charge of
looking for the young man. Polyphemus 1 died an old
man without ever finding
Hylas. He was son of
Elatus 1 and Hippea, daughter of Antippus
[Apd.1.9.19; Hyg.Fab.14; Lib.Met.26; Val.1.457].
|
|
Priasus 1. Son of Caeneus 1, counted
among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [Hyg.Fab.14].
|
|
Staphylus 1 is said to have received
Lyrcus 2 (son of
Phoroneus) in Bybastus
in the most friendly manner and enticed him to much
drinking of wine; and when his senses were dulled
by drunkenness, united him with his own daughter
Molpadia 2. He was son of
Ariadne, either by
Dionysus 2, or by
Theseus. Staphylus 1 had
children by Chrysothemis 2: the aforementioned
Molpadia 2, Rhoeo, Parthenos, and Hemithea
[Apd.1.9.16; Apd.Ep.1.9; Dio.5.62.1; Parth.1.3;
Plu.The.20.2].
|
|
Talaus. King of
Argos. Talaus was wounded
by Orides, a Bebrycian, during the trip of the
ARGONAUTS but survived. At his death he was buried
in Argos.
|
Parentage [two versions]
|
Mates [three versions]
|
Offspring
|
Notes
|
|
Bias 1 & Pero 2
|
|
Cretheus 1 & Tyro
|
|
Bias 1 is son of Amythaon 1,
son of Cretheus 1. Pero 2 is
daughter of
Neleus.
Cretheus 1 is son of
Aeolus
1. Tyro is daughter of
Salmoneus son of
Aeolus
1.
|
|
a) Lysimache 1
|
- Adrastus
1
- Parthenopaeus
- Pronax
- Mecisteus 1
- Aristomachus 1
- Eriphyle
- Hippomedon 1
|
Lysimache 1 was daughter of Abas 3, son
of Melampus 1, son of Amythaon 1, son of
Cretheus 1, son of
Aeolus 1.
Parthenopaeus is son of
Atalanta.
Mecisteus 1 is among the
SEVEN AGAINST
THEBES.
Aristomachus 1 is father of Hippomedon
1, one of the
SEVEN,
according to some.
Eriphyle married
Amphiaraus,
one of the
SEVEN.
|
|
b) Eurynome 2
|
- Adrastus
1
- Astynome 1
- Metidice
|
Astynome 1 is mother of Capaneus, one
of the
SEVEN.
Metidice is called mother of Hippomedon
1.
|
|
c) Lysianassa 3
|
- Adrastus
1
- Mecisteus 1
|
Lysianassa 3 is daughter of King
Polybus 9 of
Sicyon.
|
[Apd.1.9.13, 3.6.3; Arg.1.118, 2.110; Hdt.5.67;
Hyg.Fab.70; Pau.2.6.6, 2.21.2, 8.25.9;
Stat.Theb.5.406; Val.1.358].
|
|
Telamon, also counted among the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS, is possibly
Peleus' brother; for some
say he was son of Aeacus
and Endeis. But others say he was son of Actaeus 2
and Glauce 2 [see also
Peleus]. He accompanied
Heracles 1 in his
expedition against Troy,
where he received Hesione
2, daughter of King Laomedon 1 of
Troy, and had by her a son
Teucer 1, who is one of the
ACHAEAN LEADERS.
Glauce 2 has also been called his wife, but
otherwise Telamon married Periboea 2, daughter of
Alcathous 3, son of Pelops
1, and had by her a son
Ajax 1. Telamon is also
the father of Trambelus, a Lesbian who went against
Achilles, when the
latter was ravaging Lesbos, and was killed by him
[Apd.1.8.2, 2.6.4, 3.10.8, 3.12.6-7; Hyg.Fab.14,
97; Dio.4.32.5, 4.40.2, 4.72.7; Parth.26.4;
Stat.Theb.5.379].
|
|
Theseus.
|
|
Tiphys was the pilot of the Argo, vessel
of the ARGONAUTS. He was son either of Phorbas 2
(one of the LAPITHS) and Hyrmina (daughter of King
Epeius 1 of Elis), or of
Hagnias. Tiphys died during the voyage of a short
illness in the land of the Mariandynians, in the
southern coast of the Black Sea [AO.490, 723;
Apd.1.9.16, 1.9.23; Arg.2.854; Hyg.Fab.14;
Hyg.Fab.18; Stat.Theb.5.413; Val.1.419, 5.15ff.].
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Tydeus 1. This Tydeus from Olenus in
Aetolia, has the same name and comes from the same
country as Tydeus, father of
Diomedes 2 and one of
the SEVEN AGAINST
THEBES. Yet he could hardly be the same as the
father of Diomedes 2,
since Tydeus, father of
Diomedes 2, was born
after the expedition of the
ARGONAUTS, and after
the episode of the
CALYDONIAN
HUNTERS [see Tydeus
2] [Val.1.387, 3.103].
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Zetes. Son of Boreas 1 [see
WINDS] and Orithyia 2.
Like his brother Calais, he is said to have wings
on head and feet. Some have said that Zetes died in
chasing the HARPIES, but others said that he was
killed by Heracles 1
[Apd.3.15.2; Hyg.Fab.14, 19; Prop.1.20.26;
Val.1.469].
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Lists of ARGONAUTS
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According to:
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ARGONAUTS
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Argonautica Orphica
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Acastus, Admetus 1, Aethalides 1, Amphidamas 2,
Amphion 2, Ancaeus 1, Argus 4, Arius 1, Asterion 5,
Asterius 1, Augeas, Butes 1, Calais, Canthus 1,
Castor 1, Cepheus 2, Coronus 1, Echion 1, Erginus
2, Euphemus 1, Eurydamas 2, Eurytion 2, Eurytus 2,
Heracles 1,
Hylas, Idas 2, Idmon 2,
Iphiclus 1, Iphiclus 2, Iphitus 2,
Jason, Leodocus, Lynceus
1, Meleager, Menoetius
2, Mopsus 1, Nauplius 1, Oileus 1,
Orpheus, Palaemon 1,
Peleus, Periclymenus 1,
Phalerus 1, Phlias, Polydeuces, Polyphemus 1,
Talaus, Telamon, Tiphys, Zetes.
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Valerius Flaccus,
Argonautica
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Acastus, Admetus 1, Aethalides 1, Amphidamas 2,
Amphion 2, Ancaeus 2, Argus 4, Asterion 5, Asterius
1, Butes 1, Calais, Canthus 1, Castor 1, Cepheus 2,
Clymenus 10, Deucalion 4, Echion 1, Erginus 2,
Eribotes, Euphemus 1, Eurytion 2, Eurytus 2,
Heracles 1,
Hylas, Idas 2, Idmon 2,
Iphiclus 1, Iphis 6, Iphitus 2,
Jason, Leodocus, Lynceus
1, Meleager, Menoetius
2, Mopsus 1, Nauplius 1,
Nestor, Oileus 1,
Orpheus,
Peleus, Periclymenus 1,
Phalerus 1,
Philoctetes, Phlias,
Polydeuces, Polyphemus 1, Talaus, Telamon, Tiphys,
Tydeus 1, Zetes.
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Hyginus, Fabulae
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Acastus, Actor 2, Aethalides 1, Amphidamas 2,
Amphion 2, Ancaeus 1, Ancaeus 2, Argus 2,
Asclepius, Asterion 5,
Asterius 1, Augeas, Butes 1, Caeneus 2, Calais,
Castor 1, Cepheus 2, Clytius 1, Coronus 1,
Deucalion 2, Echion 1, Erginus 2, Eribotes,
Euphemus 1, Eurydamas 2, Eurymedon 1, Eurytion 2,
Eurytus 2, Heracles 1,
Hippalcimus 1, Hylas, Idas
2, Idmon 2, Iolaus 1, Iphiclus 1, Iphiclus 2,
Iphitus 1, Iphitus 2,
Jason, Lacoon, Lynceus 1,
Meleager, Menoetius 2,
Mopsus 1, Nauplius 1,
Neleus, Oileus 1,
Orpheus, Palaemon 1,
Peleus, Periclymenus 1,
Phalerus 1,
Philoctetes, Phlias,
Phocus 1, Pirithous,
Polydeuces, Polyphemus 1, Priasus 1, Telamon,
Theseus, Tiphys, Zetes.
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Apollonius Rhodius,
Argonautica
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Acastus, Admetus 1, Aethalides 1, Amphidamas 2,
Amphion 2, Ancaeus 1, Ancaeus 2, Argus 4, Arius 1,
Asterion 5, Asterius 1, Augeas, Butes 1, Calais,
Canthus 1, Castor 1, Cepheus 2, Clytius 1, Coronus
1, Echion 1, Erginus 2, Eribotes, Euphemus 1,
Eurydamas 2, Eurytion 2, Eurytus 2,
Heracles 1,
Hylas, Idas 2, Idmon 2,
Iphiclus 1, Iphiclus 2, Iphitus 1, Iphitus 2,
Jason, Lacoon, Leodocus,
Lynceus 1, Meleager,
Menoetius 2, Mopsus 1, Nauplius 2, Oileus 1,
Orpheus, Palaemon 1,
Peleus, Periclymenus 1,
Phalerus 1, Phlias, Polydeuces, Polyphemus 1,
Talaus, Telamon, Tiphys, Zetes.
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Apollodorus, The Library
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Acastus, Actor 2, Admetus 1,
Amphiaraus, Ancaeus
1, Argus 3, Ascalaphus 1, Asterius 1,
Atalanta, Augeas,
Autolycus 1, Butes 1, Caeneus 2, Calais, Castor 1,
Cepheus 2, Erginus 2, Euphemus 1, Euryalus 1,
Eurytus 2, Heracles 1,
Hylas, Ialmenus 1,
Iphiclus 2, Iphitus 2,
Jason, Laertes, Leitus,
Meleager, Menoetius 2,
Orpheus, Palaemon 1,
Peleus, Peneleus,
Periclymenus 1, Phanus, Poeas, Polydeuces,
Polyphemus 1, Staphylus 1, Telamon,
Theseus, Tiphys, Zetes.
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Strabo, Geography 12.4.3.
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Strabo adds the name of Cius, as companion of
Heracles 1 in the
Argo.
He also mentions [11.4.8, 11.14.12] that a
Thessalian called Armenus (a native of Armenium, a
city on the lake Boebeis) followed
Jason in the trip to
Colchis, and that the country Armenia was named
after him.
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Casualties of the ARGONAUTS during the
expedition:
Calais [Apd.3.15.2, or killed by
Heracles 1
afterwards]
Canthus 1 [Arg.4.1485ff., and Val.6.317ff., but
different accounts]
Clytius 1 [Hyg.Fab.14]
Hylas [AO.643; Apd.1.9.19;
Nonn.11.228; Strab.12.4.3; Val.3.545ff.]
Idmon 2 [killed by a boar or disease, Apd.1.9.23;
Arg.2.815ff.; Hyg.Fab.17, 248; Val.5.2]
Iphis 6 [Val.7.423]
Polyphemus 1 [left in Mysia, Apd.1.9.19]
Tiphys [AO.723; Apd.1.9.23; Arg.2.854; Hyg.Fab.18;
Val.5.15ff.;]
Zetes [Apd.3.15.2, or killed by
Heracles 1
afterwards].
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