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or Cisus succeeded
Lacidamus, who had little else than the title of a king. His son Meltas, impatient of such restraint, endeavored, when it was too late, to restore it to its ancient dignity; but the people were by that time grown so powerful and headstrong, that, as soon as they found out his
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king, Pityreus. His brothers-in-law, however, who begrudged him the possession of their sister
Hyrnetho, went to Epidaurus, and tried to persuade her to leave her husband; and when this attempt failed, they carried her off by force. Deiphontes pursued them, and after having killed one of them,
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Cerynes, he wrestled with the other, Phalces, who held his sister in his arms. In this struggle, Hyrnetho was unintentionally killed by her own brother, who then escaped. Deiphontes carried her body back to
Epidaurus, and there erected a sanctuary to her.
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as his share, he bestowed all his affections upon daughter
Hyrnetho and her husband Deiphontes. His sons, who had reason to fear he would appoint him his successor, are said to have hired the
134:, however, reports a different story. According to him, after Temenus's death it was not Deiphontes that succeeded him, but Ceisus. Deiphontes, on the other hand, is said to have lived at
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design, they put an effectual stop to it, and an end to kingly power, reducing the government into a democracy, and condemning their unhappy prince to death.
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From this time the royal prerogative began to lose ground very fast. To
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the
Heracleide, by whom he became the father of Antimenes, Xanthippus,
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
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192:. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. p. 370.
90:, and Orsobia. Deiphontes was descended from
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122:to murder their father. According to the
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147:Decline and end of monarchy at Argos
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186:Avery, Catherine B., ed. (1962).
110:When Temenus, in the division of
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189:New Century Classical Handbook
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80:Hyrnetho
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