1200:
759:
same spear by which he had been wounded." So
Telephus sought out Agamemnon, and on the advice of Agamemnon's wife Clytemnestra, Telephus snatched their infant son Orestes from his cradle, and threatened to kill the child unless his wound was healed. As the Greeks had also received an oracle saying that they would not be able to take Troy without Telephus' aid, they asked Achilles to heal Telephus. When Achilles protested he did not know anything about medicine, Odysseus pointed out that Apollo did not mean Achilles, but that the spear itself would be the cure. So they scraped rust from the spear into the wound, and Telephus was cured. The Greeks then asked Telephus to join them in sacking Troy, but Telephus refused because his wife
496:
351:
188:
776:
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377:. A drunken Heracles, during a festival of Athena, rapes "Athena's priestess Auge, daughter of Aleus, as she conducted the dances during the nocturnal rites." Auge gives birth secretly in Athena's temple at Tegea, and hides the new-born Telephus there. The child is discovered, and Aleus orders Telephus exposed and Auge drowned, but Heracles returns and apparently saves the pair from immediate death, and the play perhaps ended with the assurance (from Athena to Heracles?) that Auge and Telephus would be wife and son to Teuthras.
1004:
5–6); Teuthras finding Auge on the shore in Mysia (panel 10); Heracles discovering the abandoned
Telephus being suckled by a lioness (panel 12); Telephus receiving arms from Auge, and leaving for the war against Idas (panels 16–18); Teuthras giving Auge to Telephus in marriage (panel 20); and Auge and Telephus, being startled by a serpent, and recognizing each other on their wedding night (panel 21). The next several panels have been interpreted as depicting the battle between the Mysians and the Greeks on the
1087:
31:
434:, a childhood companion who had been found as a baby on Mount Parthenion at the same time as Telephus, and was raised together with him. Teuthras then gave Auge to Telephus, but Auge still faithful to Heracles, attacked Telephus with a sword in their wedding chamber, but the gods intervened sending a serpent to separate them, causing Auge to drop her sword. Just as Telephus was about to kill Auge, she called out to Heracles for rescue and Telephus then recognized his mother.
1009:
regarding the healing of his wound (panel 1); Telephus arriving at Argos, seeking a cure for his wound (panels 34–35); his welcome there (panels 36–38); a banquet at Argos during which
Telephus' identity is revealed (panels 39–40); Telephus threatening the infant Orestes at an altar (panel 42); and presumably his healing by Achilles. Two final panels perhaps depict Telephus' death and heroizing (panels 47–48).
343:, and according to Alcidamas, Nauplius, ignoring his orders, sold mother and child to the childless Mysian king Teuthras, who married Auge and adopted Telephus, and "later gave him to Priam to be educated at Troy". Alcidamas' version of the story must have diverged from Sophocles in at least this last respect. For, rather than the infant Telephus being sold to Teuthras, as in Alcidamas, an
744:. Apollodorus' account agrees with Proclus' summary, but gives more of the story. Telephus killed many Greeks in addition to Thersander, but was tripped by a vine while fleeing from Achilles. Apollo told Telephus that his wound "would be cured when the one who wounded him should turn physician". So Telephus went to Argos "clad in rags" (as in Euripides'
407:, says that Auge delivered Telephus secretly in Athena's temple, and hid him there. Apollodorus adds that an ensuing famine, was declared by an oracle to be the result of some impiety in the temple, and a search of the temple caused Telephus to be found. Aleus had Telephus exposed on Parthenion, where as in Sophocles'
278:(sixth century BC), representing perhaps the oldest tradition, places Telephus' birth in Mysia. In this telling Telephus' mother Auge had been received at the court of Teuthras in Mysia (possibly at the command of the gods) and raised by him as a daughter. And it is in Mysia that Heracles, while seeking the horses of
398:
provide additional details and variations. Diodorus, as in
Alcidamas' account, says that Aleus gave the pregnant Auge to Nauplius to be drowned, that she gave birth to Telephus near Mount Parthenion, and that she ended up with Teuthras in Mysia. But in Diodorus' account, instead of being sold, along
251:
There were three versions of how
Telephus, the son of an Arcadian princess, came to be the heir of a Mysian king. In the oldest extant account, Auge goes to Mysia, is raised as a daughter by Teuthras, and Telephus is born there. In some accounts Telephus arrives in Mysia as an infant with his mother,
1003:
The panels depict scenes from the life of
Telephus, from events preceding his birth, to perhaps his death and heroizing. Panels have been interpreted as showing Heracles' first glimpse of Auge in an oak grove (panel 3); carpenters building the vessel in which Auge will be cast into the sea (panels
758:
Hyginus' account seems to be based, in part at least, on one or more of the tragedians' lost plays. Hyginus tells of the wound inflicted by
Achilles' spear, the wound's festering, and Telephus' consulting of the Apollo's oracle, with the answer that "the only thing that could cure him was the very
1146:
E 382) shows
Telephus, with bandaged thigh, sitting on an altar, holding a spear in his right hand, and the infant Orestes with his left arm. From the left, Agamemnon confronts Telephus, with spear. Later Italic treatments of the scene usually include both Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, often with
1466:
Their claimed descent from the hero
Telephos, as prominently proclaimed by the Telephus frieze, was used by the Attalids to legitimize their claim to sovereignty, and to establish Pergamon's Greek heritage. Telephus was the object of ritual hero worship at Pergamon. According to Pausanias, the
1008:
plain, including Hiera, Telephus' Amazon-like wife, leading a group of Mysian women cavalry into battle (panels 22–24) and
Achilles, aided by Dionysus, wounding Telephus (panels 30–31). Scenes follow which have been interpreted as showing Telephus consulting the oracle of Apollo
1017:
The abandoned Telephus being suckled by a deer was a frequent iconographic motif. Except for the Telephus frieze, which depicts the abandoned Telephus being suckled by a lioness, every other depiction of this event shows Telephus suckled by a deer. The earliest such representations occur on
1000:. The frieze adorned the inside walls of the colonnade that surrounded the raised interior court containing the sacrificial altar. It was nearly 60 meters in length, and was composed of around 74 marble panels each 1.58 meters high, of which 47 panels are completely or partially preserved.
403:, who raises Telephus as his son. When Telephus grows up, wishing to find his mother, he consults the oracle at Delphi, which sends him to king Teuthras in Mysia. There he finds Auge and, as before, is adopted by the childless king, and made his heir. Apollodorus, as in Euripides'
1345:(see above) which told the circumstances of Telephus' birth. His mother Auge having been raped by a drunken Heracles, the infant Telephus is found in Athena's temple, ordered put to death, but saved by Heracles. Euripides, like Aeschylus and Sophocles, also wrote a play entitled
958:(c. 480 BC). Scenes showing Telephus suckled by a deer or holding Orestes hostage were particularly popular. Other scenes include either his wounding or his healing by Achilles. The most complete single account of the life of Telephus is depicted in the first-century BC
335:, telling her she must remain a virgin, on pain of death. But Heracles passing through Tegea, being entertained by Aleus in the temple of Athena, became enamored of Auge and while drunk had sex with her. Aleus discovered that Auge was pregnant and gave her to
1199:
754:
1.59, agrees with Proclus' and Apollodorus' accounts, but attributes the vine-tripping to Dionysus, angry because of unpaid honors, and adds that in addition to leading the Greeks to Troy, Telephus also agreed not to aid the Trojans in the coming war.
450:) told how Telephus, while still in Arcadia, prior to going to Mysia in search of his mother, killed Aleus' sons, thereby fulfilling the oracle. Ancient sources confirm the killing, however virtually nothing is known of how this may have come about.
1022:(c. 480 BC), depicting the infant Telephus keeling or crawling under a standing deer, grasping the deer's teats. Nearly identical scenes appears on Tegeatic coins from about 370 BC. Pausanias reports seeing an image of Telephus suckled by a deer on
685:
to use as a hostage. But it was discovered that Telephus was a Greek by birth, and Telephus agreed to guide the Greek army to Troy, in return for Achilles' healing his wound. Orestes being held hostage by Telephus was already being illustrated on
587:
to seek a cure, and there was healed by Achilles. In return Telephus agreed to guide the Greeks to Troy. Apollodorus and Hyginus tell us that rust scraped from Achilles' spear was the healing agent. The healing of Telephus was a frequent theme in
297:, who goes on to say, perhaps drawing upon Hecataeus, that when Aleus discovered that Auge had given birth to Telephus, he had mother and child shut up in a wooden chest and cast adrift on the open sea. The chest made its way from Arcadia to the
453:
The murder of his uncles would have caused Telephus to become religiously polluted, and in need of purification, and apparently, Greek religious practice required criminal homicides to remain silent until their blood-guilt could be expiated.
1462:
who had come with Telephus to Mysia. Inscriptions record the association between Pergamon and Tegea, and the most important cult of Pergamon, the cult of Athena, was said to have been brought from Tegea, and established at Pergamon by Auge.
6409:
Greek Anthology, Volume I: Book 1: Christian Epigrams. Book 2: Description of the Statues in the Gymnasium of Zeuxippus. Book 3: Epigrams in the Temple of Apollonis at Cyzicus. Book 4: Prefaces to the Various Anthologies. Book 5: Erotic
1370:, the comic hero of the play, Dicaeopolis, modelled on the Euripidean Telephus, takes as hostage a charcoal basket, and borrows Telephus' beggar costume from Euripides (who appears as a character in the play), to wear as a disguise. In
1376:, a kinsman of Euripides (who again is a character in the play), disguises himself (as a women). When he is exposed, he grabs an infant (which turns out to be a disguised wineskin) as hostage, and takes refuge at a sacrificial altar.
582:
The Mysians were victorious, and the Greeks returned home, but Telephus' wound would not heal. Telephus consulted the oracle of Apollo which gave the famous reply ὁ τρώσας ἰάσεται ("your assailant will heal you"). So Telephus went to
252:
where Teuthras marries Auge, and adopts Telephus. In others, while Auge (in various ways) is delivered to the Mysian court where she again becomes wife to the king, Telephus is instead left behind in Arcadia, having been abandoned on
1073:
at Tegea (finished c. 350–340 BC). Only fragments remain of the West pediment, which indicate that Telephus perhaps wore the lion-skin of his father Heracles. Inscriptions show that Telephus and Auge were represented on the
677:(438 BC), dramatized Telephus' trip to Argos seeking a cure for his festering wound. In Euripides' account, Telephus disguised himself as a beggar dressed in rags. After his disguise was revealed, Telephus seized the Greek king
3368:. New York: W. E. Dean. pp. The rust of the spear of Telephus, mentioned in Homer as a cure for the wounds which that weapon inflicted, was probably Verdegris, and led to the discovery of its use as a surgical application.
725:(first-century AD) describes paintings (undated) which depicted Achilles scraping rust from his spear into the wound of Telephus. One such painting was perhaps attributed by tradition to the fifth-century BC Athenian painter
1218:
hostage. Here, a man disguised as a woman kneels on a sacrificial altar, holding a "toddler" (wineskin "clothed" with children's shoes). The "mother" holds a wine jar ready to catch the "blood" of the slaughtered child.
638:(c. 522–443 BC), knew the story of Telephus' wounding by Achilles, presumably after being tripped by a vine: "Achilles, who stained the vine-covered plain of Mysia, spattering it with the dark blood of Telephus".
411:, he is suckled by a doe. According to Apollodorus, he was found and raised by herdsman. As in Diodorus' account, Telephus consults the oracle at Delphi, is sent to Mysia, where he becomes the adopted heir of Teuthras.
426:, she became the adopted daughter (not wife) of Teuthras. When Telephus goes to Mysia on the instruction of the oracle, Teuthras promises him his kingdom and his daughter Auge in marriage if he would defeat his enemy
634:, the Greeks mistook Mysia for Troy, Telephus killed Thersander, but was wounded by Achilles. Telephus, guided by an oracle, came to Argos, where Achilles cured him in return for Telephus guiding the Greeks to Troy.
383:, gives a version of the story similar to Pausanias', saying that, after discovering "her ruin by Heracles", Aleus put Auge and Telephus into a chest and cast it into the sea, that it washed up at the mouth of the
1321:
presumably told the story of Telephus' killing his uncles, and thus fulfilling the oracle (see above). Fragments suggest a quarrel over Telephus' illegitimate birth, which perhaps resulted in the killings.
472:
writes about a voracious dinner guest who like "Telephus in speechless silence sits, / Making but signs to those who ask him questions", presumably too intent on eating to converse. And another comic poet
1353:(see above) famously told the story of Telephus going to Argos disguised as a beggar where, after taking Orestes as hostage, he agreed to guide the Greeks to Troy in return for the healing of his wound.
748:) and, promising to guide the Greeks to Troy, begged Achilles to cure him, which Achilles did by using rust scraped from his spear. Telephus then showed the Greeks the way to Troy. The A scholia on
369:(408 BC?) which also dealt with Telephus' birth. The play is lost, but a summary of the plot can be pieced together from various later sources, in particular a narrative summary, given by the
347:
fragment seems to insure that in the Sophoclean play, as in many later accounts (see above), the new-born Telephus was instead abandoned (on Mount Parthenion?), where he is suckled by a deer.
1259:
and Telephus." All of these plays about Telephus are now lost. We know of them only through preserved fragments, and the reports of other ancient writers. Each of the three great tragedians
4732:
3513:
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inscription (after 129 BC), the people of Pergamon were called Telephidai, descendants of Telephus. According to Pausanias, the Pergamon people claimed to be descendants of the
264:, or his herdsmen. Seeking knowledge of his mother, Telephus consulted the Delphic oracle which directed him to Mysia, where he was reunited with Auge and adopted by Teuthras.
354:
Marble statue of Hercules holding baby Telephus in his arms. Ancient Roman copy from a Greek original of 4th century BC. Found in the 16th century in Campo de’ Fiori in Rome.
477:, complains about fishmongers who "mute they stand like Telephus", going on to say that the comparison of the fishmongers to Telephus is apt since "they all are homicides".
1030:. Representations showing Heracles finding Telephus with a deer are also frequent from the first century AD. The scene continued to be popular through the third century AD.
850:. The irony of Achilles' son killing Telephus' son using the same spear that Achilles had used to both wound and heal Telephus, apparently figured in Sophocles' lost play
319:), which apparently told the circumstances of Telephus' birth. The play is lost and only fragments now remain, but a declamation attributed to the fourth-century BC orator
5500:
1589:): "He got his name from circumstances". According to Kerényi his name was "more accurately ... Telephanes, 'he who shines afar'" (Kerényi, p. 337). The feminine form is
559:
caused the vine to trip Telephus because Telephus had failed to properly honor him. Dionysus' involvement is attested by a late sixth-century or early fifth-century BC
729:. The first literary references to the use of rust scraped from Achilles' spear as the healing agent for Telephus' wound are found in the first-century BC Roman poets
1807:
99 which has Auge abandoning Telephus on Parthenion while fleeing to Mysia. Telephus was probably also abandoned on Mount Parthenion (by either Aleus or Auge) in
514:
Telephus was made the heir of Teuthras' kingdom of Teuthrania in Mysia, and eventually succeeded Teuthras as its king. During Telephus' reign, in a prelude to the
399:
with his mother, to Teuthras, Telephus is abandoned by Auge "in some bushes", where he is suckled by a doe, and found by herdsmen. They give him to their king
3557:) shows Telephus sitting alone on an altar with a bandaged thigh, which has been interpreted as evidence that the Orestes hostage taking did not occur in the
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1338:. The irony of Achilles' son, killing Telephus' son, using the same spear that Achilles had used to heal Telephus, apparently also figured in the tragedy.
889:, was the wife of Telephus. The Amazon-like Hiera had already been portrayed, on horseback, leading the Mysian women into battle, on the second-century BC
236:, who had seduced or raped Auge, a priestess of Athena. When Aleus found out, he tried to dispose of mother and child, but eventually both ended up in
1278:
which perhaps told the story of Telephus coming to Mysia and seeking purification for having killed his maternal uncles. Aeschylus wrote another play
869:
Three other wives are given for Telephus, with no mention of offspring. According to Hyginus (as mentioned above) Telephus' wife was Priam's daughter
690:
possibly as early as the second quarter of the fifth century, and the scene perhaps also appeared previously in Aeschylus' presentation of the story.
6781:
468:, mentions "the man who came from Tegea to Mysia without speaking". And indeed, the silence of Telephus was apparently "proverbial". The comic poet
6454:
Minor Latin Poets, Volume II: Florus. Hadrian. Nemesianus. Reposianus. Tiberianus. Dicta Catonis. Phoenix. Avianus. Rutilius Namatianus. Others.
3467:
3453:
2953:
2946:
2942:
2687:
frs. 84, 86, and 87 (Lloyd-Jones, pp. 36–39) hint at the possibility of a scene in which the uncles impugned Telephus' illegitimate birth.
495:
1188:
1103:
718:
200:
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950:). Most representations associated with Telephus are late, with only a few earlier than the fourth century BC. Early examples include Attic
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Wright, p. 86: "The myth of Telephus, the king of Mysia and the son of Heracles and Auge, was most famously dramatized by Euripides (whose
4059:
3807:
6628:, translated by Gregory Nagy, revised by Eugenia Lao, Harvard University's Center for Hellenic Studies, Washington DC, November 2, 2020.
4125:
4114:
3975:
3839:
3817:
3415:
350:
6723:
4155:
4113:
frs. 210.24, 26–29 (Lloyd-Jones, pp. 86, 87 with note a, 88, 89), 211.10–13 (Lloyd-Jones, pp. 94, 95). According to Proclus,
3913:
1286:, in which Telephus comes to Argos seeking the healing of his wound, and perhaps also included Telephus' seizure of Orestes as hostage.
1069:
According to Pausanias, the battle between the Telephus and Achilles at the Caicus river was also depicted on the West pediment of the
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2644:, which attributes this story of near-incest by Telephus to "the tragic dramatists and their predecessors, the inventors of fables".
822:. Nothing is said there about who Eurypylus' mother was, but all ancient sources that do mention Eurypylus' mother say that she was
187:
3786:
3399:
3133:
2909:
924:. Neither Lycophron nor Dionysius mention the name of their mother, although apparently according to some, their mother was Hiera.
6780:, translated by Horace Leonard Jones; Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. (1924).
5488:
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1823:, Telephus says he was born on Mount Parthenion but later "came to the plain of Mysia, where I found my mother and made a home."
4208:
775:
5988:
5575:, Vol. 23, translated by W.H. Fyfe. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1932.
4261:
3037:(who communicates from beyond the grave), Telephus was wounded by Achilles when Telephus had lost his shield while fighting
6432:
Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes.
5228:
5165:
5143:
293:, says that Heracles used to have sex with Auge whenever he came to Tegea. We are told this by the second-century traveler
6906:
5747:
5050:
4917:
4904:
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2762:
2697:
2641:
645:
Telephus seated on altar, with bandaged thigh, holding a spear and the infant Orestes. Detail from an Athenian red-figure
3460:
3179:
1058:(both named), part of a thyrsos, and the inscription "Dionysos". It is presumed that Diomedes is attending to the fallen
920:(also spelled Tyrrhenus) are the sons of Telephus. That Tyrrhenus was said to be the son of Telephus is also reported by
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Callimachus and Lycophron with an English translation by A. W. Mair; Aratus, with an English translation by G. R. Mair
4700:
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1131:
870:
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503:
152:
2774:
2294:, has Heracles say: "As it is, wine made me lose control. I admit I wronged you, but the wrong was not intentional."
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4257:
1317:
by Sophocles, which may refer to a trilogy or tetralogy on Telephus, perhaps including one or more of these plays.
976:
921:
5186:
5156:
5139:
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frs. 210.24, 26–29 (Lloyd-Jones, pp. 86, 87 with note a, 88, 89), 211.10–13 (Lloyd-Jones, pp. 94, 95).
4189:
2594:
2551:): "A city that is sick is clever at seeking out errors", which may refer to a search for the cause of the famine.
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2010:
1960:
1869:
1794:
1566:
5539:
5224:
5161:
4389:
Heres, p. 83. For a detailed description of the iconography of frieze see, Heres and Strauss, pp. 857–862,
2467:(see Gantz, p. 429; Webster, p. 238) however Strabo's attribution may be erroneous (see Collard and Cropp 2008a,
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1228:
855:
797:
286:
225:
5493:
Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes.
3679:
3302:
3298:
3276:
1090:
Achilles (right) scrapes rust from his spear on the wound of the seated Telephus, c. first century BC. Marble
6090:: Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology, Translated, with Introductions by R. Scott Smith and Stephen M. Trzaskoma
5482:
3352:
5.1.100–101: "Whose smile and frown, like to Achilles' spear/Is able with the change to kill and cure".
2078:
5293:
5289:
4783:
3637:
3234:
3190:
1547:: 'Apollodorus seems to derive the name Telephus from θηλή, “a dug,” and ἔλαφος, “a doe."'). See also Huys,
1383:, (probably the most well known tragedian after Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides) wrote plays with titles
980:
Telephus threatens the infant Orestes, at Agamemnon's altar. Telephus frieze (panel 42), second century BC.
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2159:
1908:
1593:, of whom Kerényi writes, "She bore the lunar name Telephassa or Telephae, 'she who illuminates afar', or
1479:
As noted above, Telephus was the object of cult hero worship at Pergamon. Telephus was also worshipped on
1400:
1172:
1110:
Telephus' taking refuge at Agamemnon's altar, usually with Orestes as hostage, was also a frequent motif.
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702:
294:
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says that, according to one account, Telephus was the father of a daughter, Roma, from whom the city of
909:
694:
4353:
Dreyfus, p. 14. Heres, p. 101, gives reasons which suggest a date "between 165 and 159 B.C., or later".
3315:
1159:
The healing of Telephus was, according to tradition, depicted by the fifth-century BC Athenian painter
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30:
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2971:
6896:
6152:
6071:
4608:
4008:
2986:. Although Archilochus, Proclus, Apollodorus, and Pausanias all agree that the attack was a mistake,
2931:
2857:
2761:
fr. 411 seems to imply that Telephus has spoken, that play is generally ruled out, see Sommerstein,
2155:
2105:
1882:
1664:
1240:
1160:
1062:, and that the central part of the vase depicted Achilles wounding Telephus, with the aid of the god
1059:
726:
336:
331:
that if Auge had a son, then this grandson would kill Aleus' sons, so Aleus made Auge a priestess of
290:
257:
176:
2889:
For a discussion of the expedition in Mysia and the wounding and healing of Telephus, see Hard, pp.
1134:
98.931) shows Telephus, with bandaged thigh, sitting alone on an altar holding two spears. An Attic
3343:
1528:. According to the mythographic tradition, Telephus' name derived from his being suckled by a doe,
1454:, as well as the ancestor of the Attalids, Pergamon's ruling dynasty (from 241 BC). As early as a
1379:
Several later tragic poets apparently also wrote plays on the subject. The late fifth-century poet
1330:
are presumed to continue the story of Telephus, after his arrival as an adult in Mysia. Sophocles'
835:
826:, who was (usually) Priam's sister. Eurypylus led a large force of Mysians to fight on the side of
6617:
Post, Chandler Rathfon, "The Dramatic Art of Sophocles as Revealed by Fragments of Lost Plays" in
3765:
2.5 (Frazer, p. 40), which says that he refused because his wife Astyoche was a daughter of Priam.
6696:
6302:
3688:
3339:
3330:
3285:
2922:
2848:
2680:
2096:
2073:
1655:
1043:
687:
584:
274:
20:
4093:
4038:
4000:
3957:
3921:
3171:
3167:
2722:
1924:
6661:
6234:
6208:
5411:
3936:
2.5 (Frazer, p. 40) has Astyoche as Eurypylus' mother, but says that she was Priam's daughter.
2877:
2869:
2787:
2705:
2662:
2564:
2536:
2520:
2516:
2456:
2171:
2068:
2018:
1976:
1904:
1900:
1762:
1758:
1722:
1544:
1540:
1536:
6874:
6859:
6840:
6814:
6795:
6761:
6742:
6686:
6671:
6653:
6603:
6569:
6540:
6515:
6482:
6397:
6382:
6279:
6219:
6200:
6174:
6142:
6127:
6119:
6111:
6093:
6061:
5984:
5956:
5938:
5919:
5904:
5863:
5848:
5840:
5822:
5807:
5792:
5777:
5762:
5700:
5672:
5653:
5626:
5603:
5442:
5378:
5370:
5366:
5353:
5349:
5276:
5254:
5035:
5002:
4998:
4977:
4960:
4947:
4930:
4870:
4591:
4552:
4138:
4089:
4077:
4034:
3996:
3953:
3917:
3864:
3851:
3163:
3051:
2917:
2894:
2890:
2865:
2791:
2766:
2709:
2701:
2634:
2476:
2472:
2435:
2315:
2242:
2228:). Alcidamas is the only source for the oracle given to Aleus (see Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
2225:
2091:
1928:
1920:
1857:
1837:
1766:
1726:
1718:
1714:
1694:
1641:
1637:
1607:
1570:
1548:
1525:
1408:
1209:
793:
374:
5916:
The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: Based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek Mythology"
5893:
5761:, edited by Ken Dowden and Niall Livingstone. Wiley-Blackwell; 1 edition (January 28, 2014).
5427:
5403:
5382:
5250:
5096:
5039:
5006:
4985:
4981:
4964:
4934:
4866:
4835:
4688:
4625:
4560:
4513:
3982:
3896:
3892:
3880:
3824:
3615:
3562:
2983:
2770:
2658:
2654:
2577:
2419:
2331:
2271:
2254:
2246:
2229:
2205:
2192:
2188:
1916:
1912:
1845:
6701:
6441:
6435:
6184:
5710:
5682:
5327:
4185:
3933:
3762:
3348:
3335:
3155:
3105:
3018:
2979:
2590:
2497:
2163:
2056:
2006:
1956:
1865:
1790:
1562:
1480:
1047:
874:
571:
391:
340:
253:
136:
57:
6803:
6577:
6548:
6465:
6421:
6364:
6339:
6315:
6287:
6050:
5992:
5882:
5751:
5661:
5556:
5528:
5458:
355:
327:
for one of its sources. According to Alcidamas, Auge's father Aleus had been warned by the
6848:
6760:, Renée Dreyfus and Ellen Schraudolph, editors, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1996.
6750:
6685:, Renée Dreyfus and Ellen Schraudolph, editors, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1996.
6647:
6611:
6554:
6525:
6218:, Renée Dreyfus and Ellen Schraudolph, editors, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1996.
5937:, Renée Dreyfus and Ellen Schraudolph, editors, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1996.
5776:, Renée Dreyfus and Ellen Schraudolph, editors, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1996.
5634:
4778:
4458:
Telephos 18–42; comprising more than a third of the 101 entries for Telephus in the
3774:
3632:
3264:
3229:
2830:
2809:
2729:
1940:
1396:
1236:
993:
971:
959:
890:
722:
47:
6756:
Stewart, Andrew, "Telephos/Telepinu and Dionysos: A Distant Light on an Ancient Myth" in
6434:
Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918.
4853:
4831:
4813:
4721:
4684:
4578:
4531:
3611:
3593:
3539:
3522:
3077:
2401:, fr. 696, which has Telephus say that Auge "bore me secretly" (Collard and Cropp 2008b,
1624:
1512:
885:
says that Hiera, the leader of a contingent of Mysian women cavalry, killed in battle by
6629:
3828:
3388:
3122:
2898:
422:), after Auge abandoned Telephus on Mount Parthenion she fled to Mysia where, as in the
6916:
6332:
Art of Love. Cosmetics. Remedies for Love. Ibis. Walnut-tree. Sea Fishing. Consolation.
5511:
5203:
5182:
5152:
5112:
was repeatedly quoted and paradied for decades after its first production in 438 BCE)".
4729:
4696:
4648:
Telephos 51–80; comprising nearly a third of the 101 entries for Telephus in the
4539:
3547:
3510:
3085:
1944:
1366:
1143:
997:
900:
Three other offspring of Telephus are given which link Telephus with Italian myths. In
894:
858:, Eurypylus had a son, Grynus, who became king in Mysia and was known as the eponym of
740:
Apollodorus gives a version of the Mysian expedition, probably drawn directly from the
721:
6591) are interpreted as depicting Achilles healing Telephus with rust from his spear.
650:
328:
298:
90:
6058:
The Tale of the Hero Who Was Exposed at Birth in Euripidean Tragedy: A Study of Motifs
1334:
apparently told the story of Tellephus' son Eurypylus, killed at Troy by Achilles son
6890:
6350:
6267:
5832:
3932:
has Astyoche as Priam's sister, but Apollodorus never names Eurypylus' mother, while
3294:
1435:
1078:
of the temple, and Pausanias also mentions seeing a portrait painting of Auge there.
1050:
ST1275) apparently depicted the battle between Telephus and Achilles. Fragments show
1023:
1019:
955:
469:
144:
5475:
Aeschylus, with an English translation by Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph. D. in two volumes.
555:, Telephus was tripped while fleeing from Achilles' attack. The scholiast says that
418:(whose account is apparently taken from an older tragic source, probably Sophocles'
6474:
5976:
5534:
5506:
5219:
5198:
5177:
5147:
4201:
3970:
3812:
3497:
3410:
3404:
3097:
3026:
2987:
1990:
1361:
1204:
1119:
1039:
882:
786:
767:, the king of Troy. However, Telephus did promise to be the Greeks' guide to Troy.
567:
431:
6214:
Kästner, Volker, "The Architecture of the Great Altar and the Telephos Frieze" in
5690:
3159:
3109:
3022:
256:, either by Aleus, or by Auge when she gave birth while being taken to the sea by
5927:
2994:
23.5–9, has a character doubt that the Greeks came to Mysia "in ignorance".
289:. The oldest such account (c. 490–480 BC), by the historian and geographer
19:
This article is about Telephus the son of Heracles. For the Indo-Greek king, see
6775:
6326:
5875:
Fragmentary Republican Latin, Volume II: Ennius, Dramatic Fragments. Minor Works
4012:
3492:; Webster, pp. 43–48, 302. An important source for the plot of Euripides'
3038:
3034:
2913:
2334:, place the rape at a spring, and this version of events may reflect Euripides'
1878:
1488:
1416:
1335:
1220:
1180:
1095:
847:
779:
710:
229:
164:
5695:
Dignas, Beate, "Rituals and the Construction of Identy in Atallid Pergamon" in
4750:
Telephos 56, 58, 59, 64–66, 68; with Clytemnestra restraining Agamemnon:
4128:, Eurypylus received his father's spear from Odysseus upon his arrival at Troy.
3033:, 23.24–25, a character says that, according to the dead Trojan War hero
6707:
Seneca's Tragedies. With an English translation by Frank Justus Miller. Vol. I
6668:
When a Young Man Falls in Love: The Sexual Exploitation of Women in New Comedy
6635:
6370:
3675:
3272:
1781:) which says that Aleus "ordered Telephus to be cast out in a deserted place".
1594:
1590:
1176:
1091:
951:
831:
730:
706:
627:
560:
523:
515:
260:
to be drowned. However Telephus is suckled by a deer found and raised by King
237:
160:
128:
24:
6788:
Remains of Old Latin, Volume II: Livius Andronicus. Naevius. Pacuvius. Accius
6592:
Lives, Volume I: Theseus and Romulus. Lycurgus and Numa. Solon and Publicola.
1239:. Aristotle writes that "the best tragedies are written about a few families—
6481:, editors Jennifer K. Berenson MacLean, Ellen Bradshaw Aitken, BRILL, 2003,
6239:
6021:
The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes
5966:
5582:
5562:
5464:
5075:
5054:
5031:
5023:
4882:
4238:
4106:
3884:
3868:
3183:
2930:
XI 1359 fr. 1 (Most, pp. 184–187; Stewart, p. 110; Grenfell and Hunt,
2856:
XI 1359 fr. 1 (Most, pp. 184–187; Stewart, p. 110; Grenfell and Hunt,
2825:
2804:
2741:
2726:
2713:
2460:
2423:
2394:
2343:
2303:
2283:
2217:
2175:
2104:
XI 1359 fr. 1 (Most, pp. 184–187; Stewart, p. 110; Grenfell and Hunt,
2040:
1849:
1808:
1734:
1698:
1686:
1663:
XI 1359 fr. 1 (Most, pp. 184–187; Stewart, p. 110; Grenfell and Hunt,
1578:
1487:, and honored at Tegea, where he was shown on the pediment of the Temple of
1313:
possibly also involved Telephus. A fourth-century BC inscription mentions a
1268:
1264:
1260:
1235:
Telephus was a popular tragic hero, whose family history figured in several
1115:
1051:
917:
901:
678:
670:
666:
662:
658:
597:
542:
527:
455:
362:
320:
308:
192:
4600:
3695:. Gantz thinks it likely that "this folktale-laden motif goes back to the
3408:, another poem in the Epic Cycle, also perhaps referred to the battle, see
6003:
The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes
5757:
Dowden, Ken, "Telling the Mythology: From Hesiod to the Fifth Century" in
339:
to be drowned. But, on the way to the sea, Auge gave birth to Telephus on
6583:
5469:
5314:
So also an oracle of Apollo at Klaros, recorded in the second century AD.
5043:
5019:
4286:
4151:
3909:
3529:). A perhaps earlier (c. 470 BC) representation of the scene on an Attic
3363:
2718:
2389:
1994:
1468:
1451:
1256:
1252:
1148:
1063:
1055:
1038:
A late sixth-century or early fifth-century Attic fragmentary red-figure
925:
863:
859:
843:
823:
556:
534:
499:
400:
302:
279:
261:
241:
233:
172:
132:
120:
104:
6229:
Leutsch, Ernst Ludvig von, and Friedrich Wilhelm Schneidewin (editors),
5687:
The Trojan War. The Chronicles of Dictys of Crete and Dares the Phrygian
3850:. For discussions of Eurypylus, see Gantz, pp. 640–641; Hard, p.
3025:, Telephus is "doggedly pursuing" Odysseus when Achilles wounds him. In
6298:
6076:
5567:
5059:
4887:
4172:
4167:
4068:
4063:
4055:
4029:
4024:
3991:
3986:
3803:
3752:
101, translation by Smith and Stephen M. Trzaskoma, pp. 131–132.
3748:
3743:
3307:
3216:
3142:
3137:
2962:
2957:
2746:
2671:
2666:
2629:
2624:
2611:
2606:
2372:
2323:
2132:
2127:
2027:
2022:
1985:
1980:
1891:
1886:
1803:
1798:
1673:
1668:
1557:
1552:
1455:
1380:
1248:
1244:
1215:
1127:
1027:
913:
878:
810:
682:
616:
460:
415:
370:
168:
6660:, Translator: A.S. Way; Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA, 1913.
6110:, Cambridge University Press, 2010 (first published 1917), 3 Volumes.
5022:, the duel between Eurypylus and Neoptolemus featured in some work of
834:. Eurypylus was a great warrior, and killed many opponents, including
6771:
6496:
6139:
Sophocles: A Study of His Theater in Its Political and Social Context
6034:
4146:
4073:
3904:
3446:
3425:
3259:
2935:
2861:
2452:
2167:
1710:
1431:
1392:
1224:
1184:
1168:
1135:
1111:
1099:
1075:
1005:
981:
886:
839:
789:
783:
714:
698:
646:
635:
622:
600:, which has medicinal properties, as the healing rust of the spear.
563:
474:
384:
380:
332:
196:
148:
39:
5689:, translated by R. M. Frazer (Jr.). Indiana University Press. 1966.
673:
wrote plays, all now lost, telling Telephus' story. Euripides' play
6381:
No. 360. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1941.
6338:
No. 232, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1929.
3424:
19.326, which says that Achilles after leaving Telephus, landed at
34:
Heracles with the infant Telephus and deer, mid second century AD.
6141:, translated by Steven Rendall, Princeton University Press, 2018.
6016:
5998:
4050:
3798:
3530:
3420:
3208:
3203:
3013:
2753:. Both Aeschylus and Sophocles wrote plays about Telephus, called
2326:
frescoes (which show Auge being raped while washing clothing) and
1364:(c. 446 – c. 386 BC), which extensively parodied the play. In the
1198:
1139:
1123:
1085:
975:
805:
774:
764:
750:
640:
610:
551:
546:
494:
349:
245:
221:
217:
186:
124:
116:
112:
35:
29:
5356:; Collard and Cropp 2008a, p. 260; Heres, p. 83; Stewart, p. 109.
4777:
Heres, pp. 96–97; Heres and Strauss, p. 868 (Telephos 84);
6829:
Greek Epic Fragments: From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC
6491:
Online version at Harvard University Center for Hellenic Studies
6345:
6321:
6293:
5877:, Edited and translated by Sander M. Goldberg, Gesine Manuwald.
3683:
3661:
Heres, pp. 96–97; Heres and Strauss, p. 868 (Telephos 84).
3280:
1873:
1427:
1191:
6591) show Achilles healing Telephus with rust from his spear.
929:
827:
819:
734:
519:
427:
213:
156:
140:
108:
6782:
Online version at the Perseus Digital Library, Books 6–14
6646:
18. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1990.
533:
But Telephus was tripped by a vine and wounded in the thigh by
6171:
Hellenistic Tragedy: Texts, Translations and a Critical Survey
2897:; Gantz, pp. 576–580. Principal texts include: Proclus,
1947:, Telephus is shown being suckled by a lioness (Heres, p. 85).
1167:
bronze mirror, from the second half of the fourth century BC (
996:(between 180 and 156 BC) formed part of the decoration of the
171:. Telephus' name and mythology were possibly derived from the
6871:
The Lost Plays of Greek Tragedy (Volume 1): Neglected Authors
6355:. Translated by Frank Justus Miller. Revised by G. P. Goold.
3895:), fr. 211 has Astyoche call Priam her brother (Lloyd-Jones,
464:, in a reference to Telephus' appearance in a tragedy called
94:
6758:
Pergamon: The Telephos Frieze from the Great Altar, Volume 2
6683:
Pergamon: The Telephos Frieze from the Great Altar, Volume 1
6216:
Pergamon: The Telephos Frieze from the Great Altar, Volume 2
5935:
Pergamon: The Telephos Frieze from the Great Altar, Volume 2
5774:
Pergamon: The Telephos Frieze from the Great Altar, Volume 1
4744:
Heres and Strauss, p. 869; with Agamemnon and Clytemnestra:
3854:. For Telephus' genealogy see Parada, s.v. Telephus p. 172.
2463:. If so then this would have presumably been in Euripide's
248:, where Telephus was adopted as the childless king's heir.
78:
66:
6412:
Translated by W. R. Paton. Revised by Michael A. Tueller.
5837:
Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources
5699:, editors Beate Dignas, R. R. R. Smith, OUP Oxford, 2012.
5249:
Wright, p. 205 (Iophon and Cleophon); Kotlinska-Toma, pp.
5587:
The Deipnosophists or Banquet of the Learned of Athenaeus
940:
Over a hundred entries for Telephus are cataloged in the
191:
Heracles finds Telephus suckled by a deer, with Arkadia,
163:. Telephus' story was popular in ancient Greek and Roman
72:
6794:
No. 314. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1936.
6568:
No. 394. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1952.
6539:
No. 393. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1956.
6264:, Hodder and Stoughton, London, New York, Toronto, 1911.
5881:
No. 537. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018.
5860:
Early Greek Political thought from Homer to the Sophists
5789:
Early Greek Mythography: Volume 1: Text and Introduction
5642:
Euripides Fragments: Oedipus-Chrysippus: Other Fragments
387:, and that Teuthras married Auge, and adopted Telephus.
6306:. Translated by A. L. Wheeler. Revised by G. P. Goold.
6272:
Hesiod: The Shield, Catalogue of Women, Other Fragments
5099:; Gantz, pp. 429–430; Webster, pp. 238–240.
2274:; Gantz, pp. 429–430; Webster, pp. 238–240.
1122:, also present. Perhaps the earliest example, an Attic
697:
mirror, from the second half of the fourth century BC (
630:, told the story. According to Proclus' summary of the
5933:
Heres, Huberta, "The Myth of Telephos in Pergamon" in
4756:
Telephos 59, 64; with Odysseus restraining Agamemnon:
2418:
Collard and Cropp 2018a, p. 261; Gantz, p. 430; Huys,
1450:
Telephus was considered to be the mythical founder of
1214:(733-755), lampooning the Euripidean Telephus holding
518:, the Greeks attacked Telephus' city mistaking it for
6724:
Online version at the Perseus Digital Library (Latin)
6254:, London: W. Heinemann, New York: G. P. Putnam 1921.
5839:, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996, Two volumes:
2204:
Gantz, pp. 428–429; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
1636:
Gantz, p. 431. For general discussions see Hard, pp.
814:(c. eighth century BC), says that Telephus had a son
151:, and later healed by Achilles. He was the father of
131:, whom he succeeded as king. Telephus was wounded by
81:
75:
6334:
Translated by J. H. Mozley. Revised by G. P. Goold.
6164:
The symbolical language of ancient art and mythology
5697:
Historical and Religious Memory in the Ancient World
5589:, translated by C.D. Yonge, London 1854, 3 volumes.
4525:
Gantz, pp. 579–580; Heres and Strauss, p, 866
4344:
Telephos 1 (plate 42); Schraudolph, pp. 72–73.
3071:
Gantz, pp. 579–580; Heres and Strauss, p, 866
954:
pottery from as early as c. 510 BC, and East-Ionian
626:(late seventh century BC?), one of the poems of the
69:
63:
2704:; Kerényi, p. 339; Frazer's note 2 to Apollodorus,
1114:vase painting depicts the scene, often with either
60:
2174:, gives a similar account, which he attributes to
1309:, involving Telephus and his family. A fifth play
804:The earliest mention of Telephus, which occurs in
608:There is no mention of the battle in Mysia in the
285:All other surviving sources have Telephus born in
6619:Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 33
5717:. Translated by C. H. Oldfather. Twelve volumes.
4637:Heres and Strauss, pp. 866–868, section I.
4440:Heres and Strauss, pp. 862–865, section C.
2354:; Rosivach, p. 44 with n. 126; Kerényi, p. 338).
2350:test. iia (Hypothesis), Collard and Cropp 2008a,
2136:99, 100 which also have Auge adopted by Teuthras.
574:give detailed elaborations of all these events.
390:Later accounts by the first-century BC Historian
195:and a winged Virgo looking on, first century AD.
5948:Heres, Huberta, Matthias Strauss, "Telephos" in
301:river plain in Asia Minor, where the local king
5955:VII.1 Artemis Verlag, Zürich and Munich, 1994.
5640:Collard, Christopher and Martin Cropp (2008b),
5613:Collard, Christopher and Martin Cropp (2008a),
5602:III.1 Artemis Verlag, Zürich and Munich, 1981.
1271:wrote multiple plays which featured the story.
1151:restraining Agamemnon from attacking Telephus.
6733:Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein.
5547:. Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson.
5519:. Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson.
3879:11.520 (Fowler 2000, pp. 25–26, Dowden,
1989:99, where shepherds found Telephus along with
1289:Sophocles probably wrote at least four plays:
530:, and forcing the Greeks back to their ships.
394:and the 1st or second-century AD mythographer
6505:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
6456:Translated by J. Wight Duff, Arnold M. Duff.
6436:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
6191:, Edited and translated by Hugh Lloyd-Jones,
6029:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
6011:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
5993:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
5804:Early Greek Mythography: Volume 2: Commentary
5577:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
5501:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
5483:Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
3670:Gantz, p. 579; Frazer's note to Apollodorus,
3627:Gantz, p. 579; Frazer's note to Apollodorus,
2926:fr. 165 (Merkelbach–West numbering) from the
2852:fr. 165 (Merkelbach–West numbering) from the
2290:fr. 272b (= 265 N), Collard and Cropp 2008a,
2100:fr. 165 (Merkelbach–West numbering) from the
1659:fr. 165 (Merkelbach–West numbering) from the
1438:(170–c. 86 BC) also wrote plays called
8:
6535:. Translated W. H. S. Jones, A. C. Andrews.
6060:, Cornell University Press (December 1995).
5951:Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae
5598:Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae
5545:Birds. Lysistrata. Women at the Thesmophoria
4651:Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae
4461:Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae
2657:; Gantz, p. 429; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
2543:, see fr. 267 (Collard and Cropp 2008a, pp.
1597:'she of the white face'". (Kerényi, p. 27).
1094:, from the House of the Relief of Telephus,
943:Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae
6831:. Edited and translated by Martin L. West.
6466:Online version at Harvard University Press
6278:, No. 503, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2007.
6233:, Volume 1, Vandenhoeck et Ruprecht, 1839.
5615:Euripides Fragments: Aegeus–Meleanger
4669:51–53 (Agamemnon), 54 (Clytemnestra).
1471:sung hymns and made offerings to Telephus.
311:, in the fifth century BC, wrote a tragedy
6849:Online version at Harvard University Press
6804:Online version at Harvard University Press
6751:Online version at Harvard University Press
6648:Online version at Harvard University Press
6612:Online version at Harvard University Press
6578:Online version at Harvard University Press
6549:Online version at Harvard University Press
6422:Online version at Harvard University Press
6365:Online version at Harvard University Press
6340:Online version at Harvard University Press
6316:Online version at Harvard University Press
6288:Online version at Harvard University Press
6209:Online version at Harvard University Press
6051:Online version at Harvard University Press
5883:Online version at Harvard University Press
5752:Online version at Harvard University Press
5662:Online version at Harvard University Press
5635:Online version at Harvard University Press
5557:Online version at Harvard University Press
5529:Online version at Harvard University Press
5459:Online version at Harvard University Press
2576:Gantz, p. 430; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
1419:Nicomachus of Alexandria in Troas wrote a
6630:Online at The Center for Hellenic Studies
4807:Heres, p. 97; Heres and Strauss, p. 868,
4572:Heres, p. 96; Heres and Strauss, p. 866,
3587:Heres, p. 97; Heres and Strauss, p. 868,
2379:1080); fr. 266, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
139:came to his kingdom on their way to sack
6027:; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1919.
6009:; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924.
5892:, London, Egypt Exploration Fund, 1915.
5725:; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. 1989.
5715:Diodorus Siculus: The Library of History
5595:Bauchhenss-Thüriedl, Christa, "Auge" in
5121:Gantz, p. 578; Collard and Cropp 2008b,
3488:Gantz, p. 578; Collard and Cropp 2008b,
2539:. This may also have been in Euripides,
23:. The name also refers to the father of
6512:Aristophanes and the Carnival of Genres
6396:, Jonsered, Paul Åströms Förlag, 1993.
6041:. Edited and translated by Niall Rudd.
5888:Grenfell, Bernard P., Arthur S, Hunt,
5499:; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921.
5034:, was probably that work, see Jouanna,
1499:
6642:Edited and translated by G. P. Goold.
5873:Goldberg, Sander M., Gesine Manuwald,
5736:Roman Antiquities, Volume I: Books 1-2
4338:Heres and Strauss, pp. 860–861,
4305:Heres and Strauss, pp. 857–870,
2367:; test. iii, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
522:. Telephus routed the Greeks, killing
430:. This Telephus did, with the help of
6394:Genealogical Guide to Greek Mythology
6092:, Hackett Publishing Company, 2007.
5901:The Dictionary of Classical Mythology
4273:Grimal, s.v. Telephus p. 438; Smith,
1360:can be inferred from two comedies of
272:A surviving fragment of the Hesiodic
7:
6858:, Cambridge University Press, 1980.
6720:Commentary on the Eclogues of Vergil
5669:Herculaneum, Italy's Buried Treasure
4450:Telephos 5–17, and section D.
3017:1.52 (cited by Gantz). According to
2430:test. iib, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
2310:test. iib, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
2193:Vol. 1 pp. 46 ff. (frs. 77–89)
1993:(who had been exposed by his mother
1777:test. iib, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1741:test. iib, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1585:test. iib, Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1356:A measure of the fame of Euripides'
6835:No. 497. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6737:No. 505. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6681:Schraudolph, Ellen, "Catalogue" in
6658:Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy
6460:No. 434. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6310:NO. 151. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6195:No. 483. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6159:, Thames and Hudson, London, 1959.
5742:No. 319. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5648:No. 506. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5621:No. 504. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5551:No. 179. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5523:No. 178. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5453:No. 446. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
4620:Bauchhenss-Thüriedl, p. 46 Auge 2;
3500:' parodies of the play (see below).
232:of mainland Greece. His father was
6854:Winnington-Ingram, Reginald Pepy,
6809:Webster, Thomas Bertram Lonsdale,
6790:. Translated by E. H. Warmington.
6598:No. 46. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6416:No. 67. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6375:Select Papyri, Volume III: Poetry.
6359:No. 43. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
6231:Corpus Paroemiographorum Graecorum
6045:No. 33. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5772:Dreyfus, Renée, "Introduction" in
5449:. Translated by A. F. Scholfield.
3561:, see Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
3054:; Gantz, p. 579; Frazer's note to
2661:; Frazer's note 1 to Apollodorus,
2189:pp. 32–41 (frs. 77–89)
2094:; Gantz, p. 428; Hesiod (Pseudo),
2047:fr. 696 (Collard and Cropp 2008b,
1819:fr. 696, Collard and Cropp 2008b,
1391:. Another late fifth-century poet
16:Son of Heracles in Greek mythology
14:
6709:, Harvard University Press 1938.
6621:, Harvard University Press, 1922.
6594:Translated by Bernadotte Perrin.
5806:, Oxford University Press, 2013.
5791:, Oxford University Press, 2000.
5477:Vol 2. Cambridge, Massachusetts.
2679:, 2.85 (Leutsch and Schneidewin,
6106:, W. G. Headlam, A. C. Pearson,
5125:; Webster, pp. 43–48, 302.
3533:cup (Heres and Strauss, p. 866,
3437:Gantz, p. 578; Frazer's note to
2786:Frazer's note 1 to Apollodorus,
2154:Stewart, p. 110; Gantz, p. 428;
908:, the legendary founders of the
596:of John Ayrton Paris identifies
103:, "far-shining") was the son of
56:
6873:, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2016.
6503:, Diane Arnson Svarlien. 1990.
6470:Internet Archive (1934 edition)
6173:, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014.
5821:, John Wiley & Sons, 2016.
5447:On Animals, Volume I: Books 1-5
4762:Telephos 56?, 68 (compare with
4444:(Telephus suckled by the hind)
4442:Telephos von der Hindin gesäugt
4141:; Grimal, s.v. Grynus, p. 176;
2338:. See Collard and Cropp 2008a.
1935:3.3 (Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1832:Almost certainly in Sophocles,
1709:, Webster, pp. 238—240);
1551:; Webster, pp. 238–239;
1395:, and the fourth-century poets
830:during the final stages of the
111:, who was the daughter of king
5890:The Oxyrhynchus Papyri Part XI
5759:A Companion to Greek Mythology
5738:. Translated by Earnest Cary.
4454:(Heracles discovers Telephus)
2224:14-16 (Garagin and Woodruff,
1815:(see Gantz, p. 429), since in
1274:Aeschylus wrote a play called
1189:National Archaeological Museum
1104:National Archaeological Museum
881:a daughter of Teuthras. While
719:National Archaeological Museum
502:; ancient Greek polychromatic
414:According to the mythographer
201:National Archaeological Museum
1:
6377:Translated by Denys L. Page.
6023:. Cambridge, Massachusetts.,
6005:. Cambridge, Massachusetts.,
5748:Online version by Bill Thayer
5727:Online version by Bill Thayer
5005:; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
4984:; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
4687:; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
4594:; Heres and Strauss, p. 862,
4229:Grimal, s.v. Telephus p. 438.
2769:; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
2245:; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
2191:; Jebb, Headlam and Pearson,
1864:; Webster, p. 239). See also
1491:at Tegea, fighting Achilles.
1311:The Gathering of the Achaeans
1126:cup (c. 470 BC) from Eastern
592:and later Roman poetry. The
507:
6856:Sophocles: An Interpretation
6722:, Georgius Thilo, Ed. 1881.
6564:. Translated by H. Rackham.
6166:, Kessinger Publishing, 1892
5721:. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
5671:, Getty Publications, 1989.
3716:, along with Frazer's notes.
1179:, c. first century BC, from
842:, but was finally killed by
6260:Margoliouth, David Samuel,
6169:Kotlinska-Toma, Agnieszka,
4920:; Gantz, pp. 578–579.
4847:Heres and Strauss, p. 868;
4825:Heres and Strauss, p. 866,
4678:Heres and Strauss, p. 866,
4663:Heres and Strauss, p. 869,
4497:Heres and Strauss, p. 869,
4482:Heres and Strauss, p. 869,
3605:Heres and Strauss, p. 866,
3578:; Gantz, pp. 578–579.
3362:Paris, John Ayrton (1831).
3178:, see Liddell & Scott,
3041:, and so was "unprotected".
2459:, which attributes this to
1860:; Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1693:16 (Garagin and Woodruff,
1506:Heres and Strauss, p. 865,
1434:(c. 239–169 BC), and
709:(c. first century BC) from
155:, who fought alongside the
6933:
6811:The Tragedies of Euripides
6670:, Psychology Press, 1998.
6108:The Fragments of Sophocles
5918:, Psychology Press, 2004,
5858:Garagin, M., P. Woodruff,
5732:Dionysius of Halicarnassus
5495:Cambridge, Massachusetts,
4715:Heres and Stauss, p. 866,
4452:Herakles entdeckt Telephos
4258:Dionysius of Halicarnassus
3121:Stewart, p. 114; Proclus,
1836:(see Gantz, p. 429; Huys,
1705:(Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1407:. The fourth-century poet
1403:, each wrote plays called
1282:thought to be a sequel to
1147:Clytemnestra or sometimes
969:
922:Dionysius of Halicarnassus
159:against the Greeks in the
95:
18:
6813:, Methuen & Co, 1967
6533:, Volume VII: Books 24-27
6104:Jebb, Richard Claverhouse
5979:(translator), Cambridge:
5903:, Wiley-Blackwell, 1996,
5540:Women at the Thesmophoria
5225:Women at the Thesmophoria
5166:466–764 with n. 466
5162:Women at the Thesmophoria
5134:Collard and Cropp 2008b,
5091:Collard and Cropp 2008a,
4644:(Telephos as suppliant),
2363:Collard and Cropp 2008a,
2266:Collard and Cropp 2008a,
1524:See for example, Knight,
1373:Women at the Thesmophoria
1210:Women at the Thesmophoria
323:probably used Sophocles'
6902:Kings in Greek mythology
6837:Harvard University Press
6739:Harvard University Press
6600:Harvard University Press
6562:, Volume IX: Books 33-35
6462:Harvard University Press
6418:Harvard University Press
6361:Harvard University Press
6312:Harvard University Press
6262:The Poetics of Aristotle
6197:Harvard University Press
6157:The Heroes of the Greeks
6047:Harvard University Press
6025:Harvard University Press
6007:Harvard University Press
5981:Harvard University Press
5744:Harvard University Press
5723:Harvard University Press
5650:Harvard University Press
5623:Harvard University Press
5553:Harvard University Press
5525:Harvard University Press
5497:Harvard University Press
5479:Harvard University Press
5455:Harvard University Press
3387:Gantz, p. 576; Proclus,
1848:), and probably also in
1229:Martin von Wagner Museum
798:Martin von Wagner Museum
6371:Page, Denys Lionel, Sir
6353:, Volume II: Books 9-15
6162:Knight, Richard Payne,
5573:Aristotle in 23 Volumes
5288:Goldberg and Manuwald,
5048:On the Control of Anger
4473:Heres, pp. 95–96.
4422:Heres, pp. 89–93.
4413:Heres, pp. 86–89.
4404:Heres, pp. 84–86.
4220:Heres, pp. 86–89.
2757:, but since Sophocles,
2578:Vol. 2, pp. 70–72
2352:pp. 264, 265, with n. 1
1997:) and raised both boys.
1644:; Gantz, 428–431.
1341:Euripides wrote a play
438:The silence of Telephus
6833:Loeb Classical Library
6792:Loeb Classical Library
6735:Loeb Classical Library
6729:Sommerstein, Alan H.,
6666:Rosivach, Vincent J.,
6644:Loeb Classical Library
6596:Loeb Classical Library
6566:Loeb Classical Library
6537:Loeb Classical Library
6464:, 1934, 1935 revised.
6458:Loeb Classical Library
6414:Loeb Classical Library
6379:Loeb Classical Library
6357:Loeb Classical Library
6336:Loeb Classical Library
6308:Loeb Classical Library
6276:Loeb Classical Library
6193:Loeb Classical Library
6043:Loeb Classical Library
5879:Loeb Classical Library
5802:Fowler, R. L. (2013),
5787:Fowler, R. L. (2000),
5740:Loeb Classical Library
5719:Loeb Classical Library
5646:Loeb Classical Library
5619:Loeb Classical Library
5549:Loeb Classical Library
5521:Loeb Classical Library
5451:Loeb Classical Library
2659:Vol 1. pp. 47–48
2206:Vol. 1 pp. 46–47
1545:Frazer note 2 to 2.7.4
1232:
1107:
1048:State Hermitage Museum
989:
801:
654:
537:' spear. According to
511:
491:Attacked by the Greeks
442:Presumably Sophocles'
359:
204:
43:
6731:Aeschylus: Fragments.
6072:Hyginus, Gaius Julius
2814:10.18, Vol. II p. 664
2677:Appendix Proverbiorum
2385:Clement of Alexandria
2253:fr. 89 (Lloyd-Jones,
2241:Gantz, p. 429; Huys,
1844:fr. 89 (Lloyd-Jones,
1202:
1175:Fr. 35) and a marble
1089:
1081:
1071:Temple of Athena Alea
979:
778:
644:
498:
353:
212:Telephus' mother was
190:
33:
6907:Children of Heracles
6407:Paton, W. R. (ed.),
6189:Sophocles: Fragments
5817:Fullerton, Mark D.,
4865:Kotlinska-Toma, pp.
3509:Gantz, p. 579; e.g.
2393:7.3.23.4). See also
2055:; Webster, p. 238);
1082:At Agamemnon's altar
910:Etruscan Dodecapolis
796:, 550–500 BC,
763:was the daughter of
356:it:Museo Chiaramonti
282:, fathers Telephus.
119:. He was adopted by
6786:Warmington, E. H.,
6514:, JHU Press, 2007;
5963:. pp. 856–870.
5667:Deiss, Joseph Jay,
5517:Acharnians. Knights
5240:Wright, pp. 58, 86.
3219:guides, the Greeks.
2920:; Hesiod (Pseudo),
2422:; Webster, p. 240;
2158:, fr. 29 Jacoby (=
1034:Wounded by Achilles
877:, Telephus married
862:and the founder of
782:killing Eurypylus?
771:Wives and offspring
6912:Arcadian mythology
6137:Jouanna, Jacques,
5862:, Cambridge 1995.
5142:; Henderson 2000,
4967:; Webster, p. 43.
4854:8894 (Telephos 81)
4832:8717 (Telephos 44)
4814:8903 (Telephos 85)
4724:; Beazley Archive
4722:8734 (Telephos 52)
4691:; Beazley Archive
4685:5985 (Telephos 51)
4579:8521 (Telephos 49)
4534:; Beazley Archive
4532:8728 (Telephos 48)
3871:, fr. 40 Fowler =
3689:Epistulae ex Ponto
3612:8717 (Telephos 44)
3594:8903 (Telephos 85)
3542:; Beazley Archive
3540:5985 (Telephos 51)
3525:; Beazley archive
3523:8734 (Telephos 52)
3286:Epistulae ex Ponto
3080:; Beazley Archive
3078:8728 (Telephos 48)
2928:Oxyrhynchus Papyri
2923:Catalogue of Women
2854:Oxyrhynchus Papyri
2849:Catalogue of Women
2835:6.5, Vol. I p. 356
2831:The Deipnosophists
2810:The Deipnosophists
2633:100. Compare with
2102:Oxyrhynchus Papyri
2097:Catalogue of Women
2074:Palatine Anthology
1773:3.3 (= Euripides,
1661:Oxyrhynchus Papyri
1656:Catalogue of Women
1625:3417 (Telephos 19)
1513:8705 (Telephos 38)
1233:
1155:Healed by Achilles
1138:(c. 450 BC), from
1108:
1054:, and a bent over
990:
802:
688:red-figure pottery
657:Each of the three
655:
512:
424:Catalogue of Women
360:
275:Catalogue of Women
216:, the daughter of
205:
183:Birth to adulthood
44:
21:Telephos Euergetes
6869:Wright, Matthew,
6845:978-0-674-99605-2
6819:978-0-416-44310-3
6800:978-0-674-99347-1
6747:978-0-674-99629-8
6654:Quintus Smyrnaeus
6608:978-0-674-99052-4
6574:978-0-674-99433-1
6545:978-0-674-99432-4
6402:978-91-7081-062-6
6284:978-0-674-99623-6
6205:978-0-674-99532-1
6185:Lloyd-Jones, Hugh
6098:978-0-87220-821-6
5868:978-0-521-43768-4
5853:978-0-8018-5362-3
5845:978-0-8018-5360-9
5658:978-0-674-99631-1
5631:978-0-674-99625-0
5610:. pp. 45–51.
5294:pp. 536–543
5290:pp. 130–135
5136:pp. 186–187
5123:pp. 185–191
5093:pp. 259–277
5042:; Gantz, p. 641;
5036:pp. 565–566
5003:pp. 216–217
4999:pp. 583–584
4986:Vol. 1 pp. 46 ff.
4978:pp. 552–553
4950:; Webster, p. 43.
4918:pp. 242–243
4905:pp. 150–151
4892:1453a 19–20
4601:8621 (Telephos 3)
4592:pp. 233–234
4124:argument 3 West,
4090:Quintus Smyrnaeus
4035:Quintus Smyrnaeus
3997:Quintus Smyrnaeus
3954:Quintus Smyrnaeus
3918:Quintus Smyrnaeus
3867:; Gantz, p. 640;
3838:argument 3 West,
3576:pp. 242–243
3490:pp. 185–191
3398:argument 7 West,
3258:See for example:
3202:But compare with
3164:Quintus Smyrnaeus
3132:argument 7 West,
3104:, 23.2–30,
2908:argument 7 West,
2846:Hesiod (Pseudo),
2751:1460a 30–32
2681:pp. 411–412
2375:On Aristophanes,
2268:pp. 259–277
2079:pp. 150–153
1921:Quintus Smyrnaeus
1653:Hesiod (Pseudo),
1610:; Stewart p. 113.
1319:The Sons of Aleus
1295:The Sons of Aleus
1243:for instance and
1046:(St. Petersburg,
1013:Suckled by a deer
794:Antimenes Painter
578:Wound and healing
448:The Sons of Aleus
317:The sons of Aleus
6924:
6711:Internet Archive
6662:Internet Archive
6392:Parada, Carlos,
6256:Internet Archive
6235:Internet Archive
5899:Grimal, Pierre,
5894:Internet Archive
5711:Diodorus Siculus
5683:Dictys Cretensis
5591:Internet Archive
5431:
5421:
5415:
5392:
5386:
5363:
5357:
5346:
5340:
5337:
5331:
5321:
5315:
5312:
5306:
5303:
5297:
5286:
5280:
5275:Kotlinska-Toma,
5273:
5267:
5264:
5258:
5247:
5241:
5238:
5232:
5217:
5211:
5196:
5190:
5175:
5169:
5132:
5126:
5119:
5113:
5106:
5100:
5089:
5083:
5073:
5067:
5016:
5010:
5007:Vol 2, p. 70 ff.
4995:
4989:
4974:
4968:
4957:
4951:
4944:
4938:
4927:
4921:
4914:
4908:
4901:
4895:
4880:
4874:
4863:
4857:
4845:
4839:
4823:
4817:
4805:
4799:
4775:
4769:
4742:
4736:
4713:
4707:
4676:
4670:
4661:
4655:
4635:
4629:
4618:
4612:
4588:
4582:
4570:
4564:
4555:; Heres, p. 96;
4549:
4543:
4523:
4517:
4510:
4504:
4495:
4489:
4480:
4474:
4471:
4465:
4438:
4432:
4429:
4423:
4420:
4414:
4411:
4405:
4402:
4396:
4387:
4381:
4378:
4372:
4369:
4363:
4360:
4354:
4351:
4345:
4336:
4330:
4329:Stewart, p. 109.
4327:
4321:
4318:
4312:
4303:
4297:
4284:
4278:
4271:
4265:
4255:
4249:
4236:
4230:
4227:
4221:
4218:
4212:
4199:
4193:
4186:Diodorus Siculus
4183:
4177:
4165:
4159:
4135:
4129:
4103:
4097:
4060:11.519–521
4048:
4042:
4022:
4016:
3967:
3961:
3943:
3937:
3934:Dictys Cretensis
3861:
3855:
3808:11.519–521
3796:
3790:
3772:
3766:
3763:Dictys Cretensis
3759:
3753:
3741:
3735:
3732:
3726:
3723:
3717:
3706:
3700:
3668:
3662:
3659:
3653:
3625:
3619:
3603:
3597:
3585:
3579:
3572:
3566:
3507:
3501:
3486:
3480:
3477:
3471:
3435:
3429:
3385:
3379:
3376:
3370:
3369:
3359:
3353:
3349:Henry VI, Part 2
3312:1.1.99–100
3303:13.170–172
3299:12.111–112
3256:
3250:
3226:
3220:
3200:
3194:
3176:ὁ τρώσας ἰάσεται
3156:Dictys Cretensis
3119:
3113:
3106:Dictys Cretensis
3095:
3089:
3069:
3063:
3048:
3042:
3019:Dictys Cretensis
3001:
2995:
2887:
2881:
2844:
2838:
2822:
2816:
2801:
2795:
2784:
2778:
2767:p. 216—217
2739:
2733:
2725:; Compare with
2702:p. 216—217
2694:
2688:
2651:
2645:
2622:
2616:
2604:
2598:
2591:Diodorus Siculus
2587:
2581:
2574:
2568:
2558:
2552:
2530:
2524:
2511:
2505:
2498:Diodorus Siculus
2495:
2489:
2486:
2480:
2449:
2443:
2436:Moses of Chorene
2416:
2410:
2361:
2355:
2316:Moses of Chorene
2301:
2295:
2281:
2275:
2264:
2258:
2239:
2233:
2215:
2209:
2202:
2196:
2185:
2179:
2152:
2146:
2143:
2137:
2124:
2118:
2117:Stewart, p. 110.
2115:
2109:
2088:
2082:
2057:Diodorus Siculus
2038:
2032:
2007:Diodorus Siculus
2004:
1998:
1970:
1964:
1957:Diodorus Siculus
1954:
1948:
1929:Moses of Chorene
1866:Diodorus Siculus
1830:
1824:
1791:Diodorus Siculus
1788:
1782:
1767:Moses of Chorene
1752:
1746:
1727:Moses of Chorene
1684:
1678:
1651:
1645:
1634:
1628:
1617:
1611:
1604:
1598:
1571:Moses of Chorene
1563:Diodorus Siculus
1522:
1516:
1504:
1481:Mount Parthenion
1195:Tragic tradition
1042:, attributed to
875:Diodorus Siculus
572:Dictys Cretensis
509:
504:pottery painting
392:Diodorus Siculus
375:Moses of Chorene
341:Mount Parthenion
254:Mount Parthenion
240:at the court of
98:
97:
88:
87:
84:
83:
80:
77:
74:
71:
68:
65:
62:
6932:
6931:
6927:
6926:
6925:
6923:
6922:
6921:
6887:
6886:
6560:Natural History
6555:Pliny the Elder
6531:Natural History
6526:Pliny the Elder
6039:Odes and Epodes
5819:Greek Sculpture
5439:
5434:
5422:
5418:
5393:
5389:
5364:
5360:
5347:
5343:
5338:
5334:
5322:
5318:
5313:
5309:
5304:
5300:
5287:
5283:
5274:
5270:
5266:Wright, p. 203.
5265:
5261:
5248:
5244:
5239:
5235:
5218:
5214:
5197:
5193:
5176:
5172:
5140:pp. 50–51
5133:
5129:
5120:
5116:
5107:
5103:
5097:pp. 81–82
5090:
5086:
5074:
5070:
5040:pp. 82–83
5038:; LLoyd-Jones,
5026:, and the play
5017:
5013:
5001:; Lloyd-Jones,
4996:
4992:
4982:pp. 32–41
4980:; Lloyd-Jones,
4975:
4971:
4963:; Lloyd-Jones,
4958:
4954:
4945:
4941:
4933:; Lloyd-Jones,
4928:
4924:
4915:
4911:
4902:
4898:
4881:
4877:
4864:
4860:
4846:
4842:
4824:
4820:
4806:
4802:
4784:Natural History
4776:
4772:
4743:
4739:
4714:
4710:
4677:
4673:
4662:
4658:
4636:
4632:
4619:
4615:
4589:
4585:
4571:
4567:
4550:
4546:
4524:
4520:
4511:
4507:
4496:
4492:
4481:
4477:
4472:
4468:
4439:
4435:
4430:
4426:
4421:
4417:
4412:
4408:
4403:
4399:
4388:
4384:
4380:Kästner, p. 74.
4379:
4375:
4371:Kästner, p. 73.
4370:
4366:
4362:Kästner, p. 70.
4361:
4357:
4352:
4348:
4337:
4333:
4328:
4324:
4319:
4315:
4304:
4300:
4285:
4281:
4272:
4268:
4256:
4252:
4246:1242–1249
4237:
4233:
4228:
4224:
4219:
4215:
4200:
4196:
4184:
4180:
4166:
4162:
4136:
4132:
4115:Summary of the
4105:Gantz, p. 641;
4104:
4100:
4094:8.195–216
4049:
4045:
4039:6.368–389
4023:
4019:
4003:. Compare with
4001:6.407–428
3968:
3964:
3944:
3940:
3893:pp. 82–95
3862:
3858:
3829:Summary of the
3797:
3793:
3775:Beazley Archive
3773:
3769:
3760:
3756:
3742:
3738:
3733:
3729:
3724:
3720:
3714:E.3.17–20
3708:Gantz, p. 579;
3707:
3703:
3680:2.1.63–64
3669:
3665:
3660:
3656:
3638:Natural History
3626:
3622:
3604:
3600:
3586:
3582:
3573:
3569:
3508:
3504:
3487:
3483:
3478:
3474:
3436:
3432:
3418:= Scholiast on
3389:Summary of the
3386:
3382:
3377:
3373:
3361:
3360:
3356:
3342:. Compare with
3320:5.2.15–16
3277:2.1.63–64
3257:
3253:
3235:Natural History
3227:
3223:
3201:
3197:
3172:8.150–153
3168:4.172–177
3123:Summary of the
3120:
3116:
3096:
3092:
3070:
3066:
3049:
3045:
3011:; A scholia on
3003:Gantz, p. 579;
3002:
2998:
2932:pp. 52–55
2899:Summary of the
2888:
2884:
2858:pp. 52–55
2845:
2841:
2823:
2819:
2802:
2798:
2790:; Lloyd-Jones,
2785:
2781:
2765:; Lloyd-Jones,
2740:
2736:
2708:; Margoliouth,
2700:; Lloyd-Jones,
2695:
2691:
2652:
2648:
2623:
2619:
2605:
2601:
2588:
2584:
2575:
2571:
2559:
2555:
2531:
2527:
2512:
2508:
2502:4.33.7–12
2496:
2492:
2487:
2483:
2450:
2446:
2417:
2413:
2362:
2358:
2302:
2298:
2282:
2278:
2272:pp. 81–82
2265:
2261:
2240:
2236:
2216:
2212:
2203:
2199:
2186:
2182:
2153:
2149:
2144:
2140:
2125:
2121:
2116:
2112:
2106:pp. 52–55
2089:
2085:
2039:
2035:
2005:
2001:
1979:; compare with
1971:
1967:
1955:
1951:
1941:Telephus frieze
1925:6.139–142
1831:
1827:
1797:. Compare with
1789:
1785:
1765:. Compare with
1753:
1749:
1685:
1681:
1665:pp. 52–55
1652:
1648:
1635:
1631:
1618:
1614:
1605:
1601:
1523:
1519:
1505:
1501:
1497:
1477:
1448:
1237:Greek tragedies
1197:
1173:Antikensammlung
1157:
1084:
1036:
1015:
994:Telephus frieze
986:Antikensammlung
974:
972:Telephus frieze
968:
966:Telephus frieze
960:Telephus frieze
938:
932:took its name.
891:Telephus frieze
873:. According to
854:. According to
773:
723:Pliny the Elder
703:Antikensammlung
620:. However, the
606:
580:
493:
488:
483:
440:
270:
210:
185:
59:
55:
48:Greek mythology
28:
17:
12:
11:
5:
6930:
6928:
6920:
6919:
6914:
6909:
6904:
6899:
6889:
6888:
6883:
6882:
6867:
6852:
6822:
6807:
6784:
6769:
6754:
6727:
6713:
6694:
6679:
6664:
6651:
6633:
6626:The Epic Cycle
6622:
6615:
6581:
6552:
6523:
6508:
6494:
6472:
6439:
6425:
6405:
6390:
6387:978-0674993976
6368:
6343:
6319:
6291:
6265:
6258:
6237:
6227:
6212:
6182:
6167:
6160:
6150:
6135:
6124:978-1108009874
6101:
6069:
6066:978-9061867135
6054:
6032:
6014:
5996:
5964:
5946:
5931:
5912:
5897:
5886:
5871:
5856:
5833:Gantz, Timothy
5830:
5815:
5812:978-0198147411
5800:
5797:978-0198147404
5785:
5770:
5767:978-1118785164
5755:
5729:
5708:
5693:
5691:Online version
5680:
5665:
5638:
5611:
5593:
5580:
5560:
5532:
5504:
5486:
5462:
5438:
5435:
5433:
5432:
5416:
5387:
5358:
5341:
5332:
5316:
5307:
5298:
5292:; Warmington,
5281:
5268:
5259:
5242:
5233:
5212:
5191:
5170:
5127:
5114:
5101:
5084:
5068:
5011:
4990:
4969:
4952:
4939:
4922:
4909:
4896:
4875:
4858:
4840:
4818:
4800:
4770:
4737:
4730:British Museum
4708:
4671:
4656:
4639:Telephos als
4630:
4613:
4583:
4565:
4544:
4518:
4505:
4490:
4475:
4466:
4433:
4424:
4415:
4406:
4397:
4382:
4373:
4364:
4355:
4346:
4331:
4322:
4320:Gantz, p. 451.
4313:
4310:s.v. Telephos.
4298:
4279:
4266:
4250:
4231:
4222:
4213:
4209:23.26–29
4194:
4178:
4160:
4130:
4098:
4043:
4017:
3962:
3938:
3891:(Lloyd-Jones,
3875:2F40 = Schol.
3856:
3791:
3767:
3754:
3736:
3734:Gantz, p. 579.
3727:
3725:Gantz, p. 579.
3718:
3701:
3663:
3654:
3620:
3598:
3580:
3567:
3511:British Museum
3502:
3481:
3479:Gantz, p. 578.
3472:
3430:
3414:, fr. 4 West,
3380:
3378:Gantz, p. 576.
3371:
3354:
3251:
3221:
3195:
3188:Divus Claudius
3114:
3090:
3064:
3043:
2996:
2918:POxy LXIX 4708
2882:
2839:
2817:
2796:
2779:
2734:
2689:
2683:). Sophocles'
2646:
2617:
2599:
2582:
2569:
2553:
2525:
2506:
2490:
2488:Gantz, p. 430.
2481:
2444:
2411:
2356:
2296:
2276:
2259:
2234:
2210:
2197:
2180:
2147:
2145:Gantz, p. 428.
2138:
2119:
2110:
2083:
2077:, 3.2 (Paton,
2033:
1999:
1965:
1949:
1945:Pergamon Altar
1825:
1783:
1747:
1679:
1646:
1629:
1612:
1599:
1517:
1498:
1496:
1493:
1476:
1473:
1447:
1444:
1196:
1193:
1163:. An engraved
1156:
1153:
1144:British Museum
1083:
1080:
1035:
1032:
1014:
1011:
998:Pergamon Altar
988:T.I.71 and 72.
970:Main article:
967:
964:
937:
934:
895:Pergamon Altar
818:, who died at
772:
769:
705:Fr. 35) and a
681:'s infant son
651:British Museum
649:, c. 450 BC,
605:
602:
579:
576:
492:
489:
487:
484:
482:
479:
439:
436:
329:Delphic oracle
305:married Auge.
269:
266:
220:, the king of
209:
206:
184:
181:
123:, the king of
15:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
6929:
6918:
6915:
6913:
6910:
6908:
6905:
6903:
6900:
6898:
6895:
6894:
6892:
6885:
6880:
6879:9781472567789
6876:
6872:
6868:
6865:
6864:9780521296847
6861:
6857:
6853:
6850:
6846:
6842:
6838:
6834:
6830:
6826:
6823:
6820:
6816:
6812:
6808:
6805:
6801:
6797:
6793:
6789:
6785:
6783:
6779:
6778:
6773:
6770:
6767:
6766:0-88401-089-9
6763:
6759:
6755:
6752:
6748:
6744:
6740:
6736:
6732:
6728:
6725:
6721:
6717:
6714:
6712:
6708:
6704:
6703:
6698:
6695:
6692:
6691:0-88401-089-9
6688:
6684:
6680:
6677:
6676:9780415184489
6673:
6669:
6665:
6663:
6659:
6655:
6652:
6649:
6645:
6641:
6637:
6634:
6631:
6627:
6623:
6620:
6616:
6613:
6609:
6605:
6601:
6597:
6593:
6589:
6585:
6582:
6579:
6575:
6571:
6567:
6563:
6561:
6556:
6553:
6550:
6546:
6542:
6538:
6534:
6532:
6527:
6524:
6521:
6520:9780801885273
6517:
6513:
6509:
6506:
6502:
6498:
6495:
6492:
6488:
6487:9789004127012
6484:
6480:
6476:
6473:
6471:
6467:
6463:
6459:
6455:
6451:
6447:
6443:
6440:
6437:
6433:
6429:
6426:
6423:
6419:
6415:
6411:
6406:
6403:
6399:
6395:
6391:
6388:
6384:
6380:
6376:
6372:
6369:
6366:
6362:
6358:
6354:
6352:
6351:Metamorphoses
6347:
6344:
6341:
6337:
6333:
6329:
6328:
6323:
6320:
6317:
6313:
6309:
6305:
6304:
6300:
6295:
6292:
6289:
6285:
6281:
6277:
6273:
6269:
6266:
6263:
6259:
6257:
6253:
6249:
6245:
6241:
6238:
6236:
6232:
6228:
6225:
6224:0-88401-089-9
6221:
6217:
6213:
6210:
6206:
6202:
6198:
6194:
6190:
6186:
6183:
6180:
6179:9781472523945
6176:
6172:
6168:
6165:
6161:
6158:
6154:
6153:Kerényi, Carl
6151:
6148:
6147:9780691172071
6144:
6140:
6136:
6133:
6132:9781108009881
6129:
6125:
6121:
6117:
6116:9781108009867
6113:
6109:
6105:
6102:
6099:
6095:
6091:
6087:
6086:and Hyginus'
6083:
6082:Apollodorus'
6079:
6078:
6073:
6070:
6067:
6063:
6059:
6055:
6052:
6048:
6044:
6040:
6036:
6033:
6030:
6026:
6022:
6018:
6015:
6012:
6008:
6004:
6000:
5997:
5994:
5990:
5986:
5982:
5978:
5974:
5973:
5968:
5965:
5962:
5961:3-7608-8751-1
5958:
5954:
5952:
5947:
5944:
5943:0-88401-089-9
5940:
5936:
5932:
5929:
5925:
5924:9780415186360
5921:
5917:
5914:Hard, Robin,
5913:
5910:
5909:9780631201021
5906:
5902:
5898:
5895:
5891:
5887:
5884:
5880:
5876:
5872:
5869:
5865:
5861:
5857:
5854:
5850:
5846:
5842:
5838:
5834:
5831:
5828:
5827:9781119115304
5824:
5820:
5816:
5813:
5809:
5805:
5801:
5798:
5794:
5790:
5786:
5783:
5782:0-88401-089-9
5779:
5775:
5771:
5768:
5764:
5760:
5756:
5753:
5749:
5745:
5741:
5737:
5733:
5730:
5728:
5724:
5720:
5716:
5712:
5709:
5706:
5705:9780199572069
5702:
5698:
5694:
5692:
5688:
5684:
5681:
5678:
5677:9780892361649
5674:
5670:
5666:
5663:
5659:
5655:
5651:
5647:
5643:
5639:
5636:
5632:
5628:
5624:
5620:
5616:
5612:
5609:
5608:3-7608-8751-1
5605:
5601:
5599:
5594:
5592:
5588:
5584:
5581:
5578:
5574:
5570:
5569:
5564:
5561:
5558:
5554:
5550:
5546:
5542:
5541:
5536:
5533:
5530:
5526:
5522:
5518:
5514:
5513:
5508:
5505:
5502:
5498:
5494:
5490:
5487:
5484:
5480:
5476:
5472:
5471:
5470:The Eumenides
5466:
5463:
5460:
5456:
5452:
5448:
5444:
5441:
5440:
5436:
5429:
5425:
5420:
5417:
5413:
5409:
5405:
5401:
5397:
5396:s.v. Telephus
5391:
5388:
5384:
5380:
5376:
5372:
5368:
5362:
5359:
5355:
5351:
5345:
5342:
5339:Heres, p. 83.
5336:
5333:
5329:
5325:
5320:
5317:
5311:
5308:
5305:Heres, p. 83.
5302:
5299:
5295:
5291:
5285:
5282:
5278:
5272:
5269:
5263:
5260:
5256:
5255:128–131
5252:
5246:
5243:
5237:
5234:
5230:
5229:688–764
5227:
5226:
5221:
5216:
5213:
5209:
5206:
5205:
5200:
5195:
5192:
5188:
5185:
5184:
5179:
5174:
5171:
5167:
5164:
5163:
5158:
5157:204–625
5155:
5154:
5149:
5145:
5141:
5138:; Henderson,
5137:
5131:
5128:
5124:
5118:
5115:
5111:
5105:
5102:
5098:
5094:
5088:
5085:
5081:
5077:
5072:
5069:
5065:
5062:
5061:
5056:
5052:
5049:
5045:
5041:
5037:
5033:
5030:mentioned by
5029:
5025:
5021:
5018:According to
5015:
5012:
5008:
5004:
5000:
4994:
4991:
4987:
4983:
4979:
4973:
4970:
4966:
4962:
4956:
4953:
4949:
4943:
4940:
4936:
4932:
4926:
4923:
4919:
4916:Sommerstein,
4913:
4910:
4906:
4903:Sommerstein,
4900:
4897:
4893:
4890:
4889:
4884:
4879:
4876:
4872:
4868:
4862:
4859:
4855:
4852:
4851:
4844:
4841:
4837:
4833:
4830:
4829:
4822:
4819:
4815:
4812:
4811:
4804:
4801:
4797:
4793:
4789:
4786:
4785:
4780:
4774:
4771:
4768:Telephos 53).
4767:
4766:
4761:
4760:
4755:
4754:
4749:
4748:
4741:
4738:
4734:
4731:
4727:
4723:
4720:
4719:
4712:
4709:
4705:
4702:
4698:
4694:
4690:
4686:
4683:
4682:
4675:
4672:
4668:
4667:
4660:
4657:
4653:
4652:
4647:
4643:
4640:
4634:
4631:
4627:
4623:
4617:
4614:
4610:
4606:
4602:
4599:
4598:
4593:
4587:
4584:
4580:
4577:
4576:
4569:
4566:
4562:
4558:
4554:
4548:
4545:
4541:
4537:
4533:
4530:
4529:
4522:
4519:
4515:
4509:
4506:
4502:
4501:
4494:
4491:
4487:
4486:
4479:
4476:
4470:
4467:
4463:
4462:
4457:
4453:
4449:
4448:
4443:
4437:
4434:
4431:Heres, p. 94.
4428:
4425:
4419:
4416:
4410:
4407:
4401:
4398:
4394:
4393:
4386:
4383:
4377:
4374:
4368:
4365:
4359:
4356:
4350:
4347:
4343:
4342:
4335:
4332:
4326:
4323:
4317:
4314:
4311:
4308:
4302:
4299:
4295:
4292:
4288:
4283:
4280:
4276:
4275:s.v. Telephus
4270:
4267:
4263:
4259:
4254:
4251:
4247:
4244:
4240:
4235:
4232:
4226:
4223:
4217:
4214:
4210:
4207:
4203:
4198:
4195:
4191:
4187:
4182:
4179:
4175:
4174:
4169:
4164:
4161:
4157:
4154:
4153:
4148:
4144:
4140:
4134:
4131:
4127:
4123:
4119:
4118:
4112:
4108:
4102:
4099:
4095:
4091:
4087:
4083:
4079:
4075:
4071:
4070:
4065:
4061:
4058:
4057:
4052:
4047:
4044:
4040:
4036:
4032:
4031:
4026:
4021:
4018:
4015:kill Machaon.
4014:
4010:
4006:
4002:
3998:
3994:
3993:
3988:
3984:
3981:
3977:
3973:
3972:
3966:
3963:
3959:
3955:
3951:
3947:
3942:
3939:
3935:
3931:
3927:
3923:
3919:
3915:
3912:
3911:
3906:
3902:
3898:
3894:
3890:
3886:
3882:
3878:
3874:
3870:
3866:
3863:Fowler 2013,
3860:
3857:
3853:
3849:
3845:
3841:
3837:
3833:
3832:
3826:
3823:
3819:
3815:
3814:
3809:
3806:
3805:
3800:
3795:
3792:
3788:
3787:Eurypylos I 3
3785:
3784:
3779:
3776:
3771:
3768:
3764:
3761:Compare with
3758:
3755:
3751:
3750:
3745:
3740:
3737:
3731:
3728:
3722:
3719:
3715:
3711:
3705:
3702:
3698:
3694:
3691:
3690:
3685:
3681:
3677:
3673:
3667:
3664:
3658:
3655:
3651:
3647:
3643:
3640:
3639:
3634:
3630:
3624:
3621:
3617:
3613:
3610:
3609:
3602:
3599:
3595:
3592:
3591:
3584:
3581:
3577:
3574:Sommerstein,
3571:
3568:
3564:
3560:
3556:
3553:
3549:
3545:
3541:
3538:
3537:
3532:
3528:
3524:
3521:
3520:
3515:
3512:
3506:
3503:
3499:
3495:
3491:
3485:
3482:
3476:
3473:
3469:
3468:9.69–79
3466:
3462:
3461:5.38–40
3459:
3455:
3454:8.49–50
3452:
3448:
3444:
3440:
3434:
3431:
3427:
3423:
3422:
3417:
3413:
3412:
3407:
3406:
3401:
3397:
3393:
3392:
3384:
3381:
3375:
3372:
3367:
3366:
3365:Pharmacologia
3358:
3355:
3351:
3350:
3345:
3341:
3340:215–218
3338:
3337:
3332:
3328:
3325:
3321:
3317:
3316:2.19–20
3313:
3310:
3309:
3304:
3300:
3297:
3296:
3295:Metamorphoses
3291:
3288:
3287:
3282:
3278:
3274:
3270:
3269:17.8–10
3267:
3266:
3261:
3255:
3252:
3248:
3244:
3240:
3237:
3236:
3231:
3225:
3222:
3218:
3214:
3213:1.71–72
3211:
3210:
3205:
3199:
3196:
3192:
3189:
3185:
3181:
3177:
3173:
3169:
3165:
3161:
3157:
3153:
3149:
3145:
3144:
3139:
3135:
3131:
3127:
3126:
3118:
3115:
3111:
3107:
3103:
3099:
3094:
3091:
3087:
3083:
3079:
3076:
3075:
3068:
3065:
3061:
3057:
3053:
3047:
3044:
3040:
3036:
3032:
3028:
3024:
3020:
3016:
3015:
3010:
3006:
3000:
2997:
2993:
2989:
2985:
2981:
2977:
2973:
2969:
2965:
2964:
2959:
2955:
2952:
2948:
2947:8.49–50
2944:
2943:5.38–40
2941:
2937:
2933:
2929:
2925:
2924:
2919:
2915:
2911:
2907:
2903:
2902:
2896:
2892:
2886:
2883:
2879:
2875:
2871:
2867:
2863:
2859:
2855:
2851:
2850:
2843:
2840:
2836:
2833:
2832:
2827:
2821:
2818:
2815:
2812:
2811:
2806:
2800:
2797:
2793:
2789:
2783:
2780:
2776:
2772:
2768:
2764:
2760:
2756:
2752:
2749:
2748:
2743:
2738:
2735:
2731:
2728:
2724:
2723:448—450
2721:
2720:
2715:
2711:
2707:
2703:
2699:
2696:Sommerstein,
2693:
2690:
2686:
2682:
2678:
2674:
2673:
2668:
2664:
2660:
2656:
2653:Lloyd-Jones,
2650:
2647:
2643:
2640:
2636:
2632:
2631:
2626:
2621:
2618:
2614:
2613:
2608:
2603:
2600:
2596:
2592:
2586:
2583:
2579:
2573:
2570:
2566:
2562:
2557:
2554:
2550:
2546:
2542:
2538:
2534:
2529:
2526:
2522:
2518:
2515:
2510:
2507:
2503:
2499:
2494:
2491:
2485:
2482:
2478:
2474:
2470:
2466:
2462:
2458:
2454:
2448:
2445:
2441:
2440:Progymnasmata
2437:
2433:
2429:
2425:
2421:
2415:
2412:
2408:
2404:
2400:
2396:
2392:
2391:
2386:
2382:
2378:
2374:
2370:
2366:
2360:
2357:
2353:
2349:
2345:
2341:
2337:
2333:
2329:
2325:
2321:
2320:Progymnasmata
2317:
2313:
2309:
2305:
2300:
2297:
2293:
2289:
2285:
2280:
2277:
2273:
2269:
2263:
2260:
2256:
2252:
2249:; Sophocles,
2248:
2244:
2238:
2235:
2231:
2230:Vol. 1, p. 47
2227:
2223:
2219:
2214:
2211:
2207:
2201:
2198:
2194:
2190:
2187:Lloyd-Jones,
2184:
2181:
2177:
2173:
2169:
2165:
2161:
2157:
2151:
2148:
2142:
2139:
2135:
2134:
2129:
2126:Compare with
2123:
2120:
2114:
2111:
2107:
2103:
2099:
2098:
2093:
2087:
2084:
2080:
2076:
2075:
2070:
2066:
2062:
2058:
2054:
2050:
2046:
2042:
2037:
2034:
2030:
2029:
2024:
2020:
2016:
2012:
2008:
2003:
2000:
1996:
1992:
1988:
1987:
1982:
1978:
1974:
1969:
1966:
1962:
1958:
1953:
1950:
1946:
1942:
1938:
1934:
1933:Progymnasmata
1930:
1926:
1922:
1918:
1914:
1910:
1906:
1902:
1898:
1894:
1893:
1888:
1884:
1883:255–256
1881:
1880:
1875:
1871:
1867:
1863:
1859:
1855:
1851:
1847:
1843:
1840:; Sophocles,
1839:
1835:
1829:
1826:
1822:
1818:
1814:
1811:'s lost play
1810:
1806:
1805:
1800:
1796:
1792:
1787:
1784:
1780:
1776:
1772:
1771:Progymnasmata
1768:
1764:
1760:
1756:
1751:
1748:
1744:
1740:
1736:
1732:
1731:Progymnasmata
1728:
1724:
1720:
1716:
1712:
1708:
1704:
1700:
1696:
1692:
1688:
1683:
1680:
1676:
1675:
1670:
1666:
1662:
1658:
1657:
1650:
1647:
1643:
1639:
1633:
1630:
1626:
1623:
1622:
1616:
1613:
1609:
1603:
1600:
1596:
1592:
1588:
1584:
1580:
1576:
1575:Progymnasmata
1572:
1568:
1564:
1560:
1559:
1554:
1550:
1546:
1542:
1538:
1534:
1531:
1527:
1521:
1518:
1514:
1511:
1510:
1503:
1500:
1494:
1492:
1490:
1486:
1482:
1474:
1472:
1470:
1464:
1461:
1457:
1453:
1445:
1443:
1441:
1437:
1433:
1429:
1424:
1422:
1418:
1414:
1410:
1406:
1402:
1398:
1394:
1390:
1386:
1382:
1377:
1375:
1374:
1369:
1368:
1363:
1359:
1354:
1352:
1349:. Euripides'
1348:
1344:
1339:
1337:
1333:
1329:
1325:
1320:
1316:
1312:
1308:
1304:
1300:
1296:
1292:
1287:
1285:
1281:
1277:
1272:
1270:
1266:
1262:
1258:
1254:
1250:
1246:
1242:
1238:
1230:
1227:, c. 370 BC,
1226:
1222:
1217:
1213:
1211:
1206:
1201:
1194:
1192:
1190:
1186:
1182:
1178:
1174:
1170:
1166:
1162:
1154:
1152:
1150:
1145:
1141:
1137:
1133:
1129:
1125:
1121:
1117:
1113:
1105:
1101:
1097:
1093:
1088:
1079:
1077:
1072:
1067:
1065:
1061:
1057:
1053:
1049:
1045:
1041:
1033:
1031:
1029:
1025:
1024:Mount Helicon
1021:
1020:engraved gems
1012:
1010:
1007:
1001:
999:
995:
987:
983:
978:
973:
965:
963:
961:
957:
956:engraved gems
953:
949:
945:
944:
935:
933:
931:
927:
923:
919:
915:
911:
907:
903:
898:
896:
892:
888:
884:
880:
876:
872:
867:
865:
861:
857:
853:
849:
845:
841:
837:
833:
829:
825:
821:
817:
813:
812:
807:
799:
795:
791:
788:
785:
781:
777:
770:
768:
766:
762:
756:
753:
752:
747:
743:
738:
736:
732:
728:
724:
720:
716:
712:
708:
704:
700:
696:
691:
689:
684:
680:
676:
672:
668:
664:
660:
652:
648:
643:
639:
637:
633:
629:
625:
624:
619:
618:
613:
612:
603:
601:
599:
595:
594:Pharmacologia
591:
586:
577:
575:
573:
569:
565:
562:
558:
554:
553:
548:
544:
540:
536:
531:
529:
525:
521:
517:
505:
501:
497:
490:
485:
481:King in Mysia
480:
478:
476:
471:
467:
463:
462:
457:
451:
449:
445:
437:
435:
433:
429:
425:
421:
417:
412:
410:
406:
402:
397:
393:
388:
386:
382:
378:
376:
372:
368:
365:wrote a play
364:
358:, the Vatican
357:
352:
348:
346:
342:
338:
334:
330:
326:
322:
318:
314:
310:
306:
304:
300:
296:
292:
288:
283:
281:
277:
276:
267:
265:
263:
259:
255:
249:
247:
243:
239:
235:
231:
227:
223:
219:
215:
207:
202:
198:
194:
189:
182:
180:
178:
174:
170:
166:
162:
158:
154:
150:
146:
142:
138:
134:
130:
126:
122:
118:
114:
110:
106:
102:
92:
86:
53:
49:
41:
37:
32:
26:
22:
6884:
6870:
6855:
6828:
6810:
6787:
6776:
6757:
6730:
6719:
6706:
6700:
6682:
6667:
6657:
6639:
6625:
6618:
6591:
6587:
6558:
6529:
6511:
6500:
6478:
6475:Philostratus
6453:
6449:
6445:
6431:
6408:
6393:
6374:
6349:
6331:
6325:
6297:
6271:
6261:
6251:
6247:
6243:
6230:
6215:
6188:
6170:
6163:
6156:
6138:
6107:
6089:
6085:
6081:
6075:
6057:
6056:Huys, Marc,
6038:
6020:
6002:
5977:A. D. Godley
5971:
5949:
5934:
5928:Google Books
5915:
5900:
5889:
5874:
5859:
5836:
5818:
5803:
5788:
5773:
5758:
5735:
5714:
5696:
5686:
5668:
5641:
5614:
5596:
5586:
5572:
5566:
5544:
5538:
5535:Aristophanes
5516:
5510:
5507:Aristophanes
5492:
5474:
5468:
5446:
5419:
5390:
5365:Dignas, pp.
5361:
5348:Dignas, pp.
5344:
5335:
5319:
5310:
5301:
5284:
5271:
5262:
5245:
5236:
5223:
5220:Aristophanes
5215:
5202:
5199:Aristophanes
5194:
5181:
5178:Aristophanes
5173:
5160:
5151:
5148:Aristophanes
5130:
5117:
5109:
5104:
5087:
5079:
5071:
5058:
5047:
5027:
5014:
4993:
4972:
4955:
4942:
4925:
4912:
4899:
4886:
4878:
4861:
4848:
4843:
4826:
4821:
4808:
4803:
4782:
4773:
4763:
4757:
4751:
4745:
4740:
4733:1836,0224.28
4716:
4711:
4689:Vol. 1 p. 96
4679:
4674:
4664:
4659:
4649:
4645:
4642:
4638:
4633:
4616:
4604:
4595:
4586:
4573:
4568:
4547:
4526:
4521:
4508:
4498:
4493:
4483:
4478:
4469:
4459:
4455:
4451:
4445:
4441:
4436:
4427:
4418:
4409:
4400:
4390:
4385:
4376:
4367:
4358:
4349:
4339:
4334:
4325:
4316:
4309:
4301:
4290:
4282:
4269:
4253:
4242:
4234:
4225:
4216:
4205:
4202:Philostratus
4197:
4181:
4171:
4163:
4150:
4133:
4126:pp. 122, 123
4122:Little Iliad
4121:
4117:Little Iliad
4116:
4110:
4101:
4067:
4054:
4046:
4028:
4020:
4011:, which has
3990:
3976:pp. 130, 131
3974:fr. 7 West,
3971:Little Iliad
3969:
3965:
3941:
3908:
3888:
3876:
3872:
3859:
3840:pp. 122, 123
3836:Little Iliad
3835:
3831:Little Iliad
3830:
3818:pp. 130, 131
3816:fr. 7 West,
3813:Little Iliad
3811:
3802:
3794:
3781:
3770:
3757:
3747:
3739:
3730:
3721:
3704:
3696:
3687:
3666:
3657:
3636:
3623:
3606:
3601:
3588:
3583:
3570:
3563:Vol. 1 p. 96
3558:
3534:
3517:
3505:
3498:Aristophanes
3493:
3484:
3475:
3464:
3457:
3450:
3433:
3419:
3416:pp. 126, 127
3411:Little Iliad
3409:
3405:Little Iliad
3403:
3395:
3390:
3383:
3374:
3364:
3357:
3347:
3334:
3323:
3306:
3293:
3284:
3263:
3254:
3233:
3224:
3207:
3198:
3187:
3175:
3141:
3129:
3124:
3117:
3101:
3098:Philostratus
3093:
3072:
3067:
3046:
3030:
3027:Philostratus
3012:
2999:
2991:
2988:Philostratus
2961:
2950:
2939:
2927:
2921:
2905:
2900:
2885:
2853:
2847:
2842:
2829:
2820:
2808:
2799:
2782:
2771:Vol 2, p. 71
2758:
2754:
2745:
2737:
2717:
2692:
2684:
2676:
2670:
2649:
2638:
2628:
2620:
2610:
2602:
2585:
2572:
2556:
2540:
2528:
2509:
2493:
2484:
2471:); see also
2464:
2447:
2439:
2432:pp. 266, 267
2427:
2414:
2407:pp. 130, 131
2405:; cf. Page,
2403:pp. 194, 195
2398:
2390:Miscellanies
2388:
2381:pp. 270, 271
2376:
2369:pp. 266, 267
2359:
2347:
2335:
2319:
2312:pp. 266, 267
2307:
2299:
2292:pp. 274, 275
2287:
2279:
2262:
2250:
2247:Vol. 1 p. 47
2237:
2221:
2213:
2200:
2183:
2178:(see below).
2150:
2141:
2131:
2122:
2113:
2101:
2095:
2086:
2072:
2053:pp. 130, 131
2049:pp. 194, 195
2044:
2036:
2026:
2002:
1991:Parthenopeus
1984:
1968:
1952:
1937:pp. 266, 267
1932:
1890:
1877:
1853:
1841:
1833:
1828:
1821:pp. 194, 195
1816:
1812:
1802:
1786:
1779:pp. 266, 267
1774:
1770:
1750:
1743:pp. 266, 267
1738:
1730:
1702:
1690:
1682:
1672:
1660:
1654:
1649:
1632:
1619:
1615:
1602:
1587:pp. 266, 267
1582:
1574:
1556:
1529:
1520:
1507:
1502:
1478:
1465:
1449:
1439:
1425:
1420:
1412:
1404:
1388:
1384:
1378:
1371:
1365:
1362:Aristophanes
1357:
1355:
1350:
1346:
1342:
1340:
1331:
1327:
1323:
1318:
1314:
1310:
1306:
1302:
1298:
1294:
1290:
1288:
1283:
1279:
1275:
1273:
1234:
1208:
1205:Aristophanes
1158:
1120:Clytemnestra
1109:
1068:
1040:calyx krater
1037:
1018:East-Ionian
1016:
1002:
991:
947:
941:
939:
905:
899:
883:Philostratus
868:
851:
809:
803:
787:black-figure
757:
749:
745:
741:
739:
692:
674:
656:
631:
621:
615:
609:
607:
593:
590:Augustan age
581:
568:Philostratus
564:calyx krater
550:
532:
513:
465:
459:
452:
447:
443:
441:
432:Parthenopeus
423:
419:
413:
408:
404:
389:
379:
366:
361:
344:
324:
316:
312:
307:
284:
273:
271:
250:
224:, a city in
211:
100:
51:
45:
6897:Heracleidae
6825:West, M. L.
5489:Apollodorus
5408:Apollodorus
5406:. See also
5257:(Moschion).
4590:Fullerton,
4551:Fullerton,
4512:Pausanias,
4395:Telephos 1.
4082:Apollodorus
4013:Penthesilea
4005:Apollodorus
3946:Apollodorus
3926:Apollodorus
3844:Apollodorus
3827:; Proclus,
3810:. See also
3710:Apollodorus
3456:. See also
3439:Apollodorus
3180:s.v. ἰάομαι
3148:Apollodorus
3110:2.1–6
3056:Apollodorus
3039:Protesilaos
3035:Protesilaos
3005:Apollodorus
2968:Apollodorus
2914:Archilochus
2874:Apollodorus
2561:Apollodorus
2533:Apollodorus
2514:Apollodorus
2071:. See also
2065:Apollodorus
2015:Apollodorus
1973:Apollodorus
1897:Apollodorus
1856:(see Huys,
1755:Apollodorus
1533:Apollodorus
1489:Athena Alea
1417:Hellenistic
1336:Neoptolemus
1221:Bell krater
1203:Scene from
1181:Herculaneum
1096:Herculaneum
936:Iconography
848:Neoptolemus
800:L 309.
780:Neoptolemus
711:Herculaneum
539:Apollodorus
506:(dating to
396:Apollodorus
230:Peloponnese
165:iconography
6891:Categories
6636:Propertius
6450:On Fortune
6446:De Fortuna
6268:Most, G.W.
6126:(Vol. 2),
5989:0674991338
5847:(Vol. 1),
5512:Acharnians
5437:References
5204:Acharnians
5183:Acharnians
5153:Acharnians
3897:pp. 92, 93
3676:Propertius
3400:pp. 72, 73
3344:Shakespear
3324:De Fortuna
3273:Propertius
3134:pp. 72, 73
2910:pp. 72, 73
2824:Quoted by
2803:Quoted by
2639:On Animals
2595:4.33.9, 11
1939:). In the
1846:pp. 40, 41
1795:4.33.9, 11
1591:Telephassa
1549:p. 295 ff.
1469:Pergamenes
1415:, and the
1367:Acharnians
1177:bas-relief
1161:Parrhasius
1092:bas-relief
1060:Thersander
952:red-figure
832:Trojan War
731:Propertius
727:Parrhasius
707:bas-relief
659:tragedians
628:Epic Cycle
561:red-figure
524:Thersander
516:Trojan War
373:historian
244:, king of
238:Asia Minor
161:Trojan War
143:and bring
135:when the
129:Asia Minor
25:Cyparissus
6839:, 2003.
6777:Geography
6624:Proclus,
6510:Platter,
6479:On Heroes
6442:Pentadius
6428:Pausanias
6410:Epigrams.
6248:Cassandra
6244:Alexandra
6240:Lycophron
6134:(Vol. 3).
6118:(Vol 1),
5972:Histories
5967:Herodotus
5855:(Vol. 2).
5583:Athenaeus
5563:Aristotle
5465:Aeschylus
5424:Pausanias
5400:Pausanias
5375:Pausanias
5324:Pausanias
5080:Eurypylus
5076:Sophocles
5055:Aristotle
5032:Aristotle
5028:Eurypylus
5024:Sophocles
4997:Jouanna,
4976:Jouanna,
4959:Jouanna,
4946:Jouanna,
4929:Jouanna,
4883:Aristotle
4834:; Deiss,
4622:Pausanias
4557:Pausanias
4243:Alexandra
4239:Lycophron
4206:On Heroes
4111:Eurypylus
4107:Sophocles
3980:Pausanias
3889:Eurypylus
3885:Sophocles
3869:Acusilaus
3822:Pausanias
3614:; Deiss,
3228:See also
3184:Suetonius
3102:On Heroes
3050:Platter,
3031:On Heroes
2992:On Heroes
2976:Pausanias
2826:Athenaeus
2805:Athenaeus
2742:Aristotle
2727:Herodotus
2719:Eumenides
2714:Aeschylus
2461:Euripides
2424:Euripides
2395:Euripides
2344:Euripides
2328:Pausanias
2304:Euripides
2284:Euripides
2255:p. 40, 41
2218:Alcidamas
2176:Euripides
2160:Pausanias
2156:Hecataeus
2041:Euripides
1943:from the
1909:Pausanias
1895:99, 252;
1850:Euripides
1809:Euripides
1735:Euripides
1699:Euripides
1687:Alcidamas
1579:Euripides
1460:Arcadians
1411:wrote an
1332:Eurypylus
1315:Telepheia
1307:Eurypylus
1269:Euripides
1265:Sophocles
1261:Aeschylus
1116:Agamemnon
1052:Patroclus
906:Alexandra
902:Lycophron
852:Eurypylus
816:Eurypylus
679:Agamemnon
671:Euripides
667:Sophocles
663:Aeschylus
598:verdigris
543:scholiast
528:Polynices
526:, son of
456:Aristotle
363:Euripides
321:Alcidamas
309:Sophocles
295:Pausanias
291:Hecataeus
228:, in the
153:Eurypylus
6827:(2003),
6741:, 2009.
6602:, 1914.
6584:Plutarch
6420:, 2014.
6363:, 1916.
6314:, 1924.
6303:Ex Ponto
6199:, 1996.
6049:, 2004.
5983:, 1920;
5746:, 1937.
5652:, 2008.
5625:, 2008.
5555:, 2000.
5527:, 1998.
5481:. 1926.
5457:, 1958.
5110:Telephus
5095:; Huys,
5051:10, 458D
5044:Plutarch
5020:Plutarch
4287:Plutarch
4152:Eclogues
4137:Dignas,
3910:Eclogues
3494:Telephus
3465:Olympian
3458:Isthmean
3451:Isthmean
2951:Olympian
2940:Isthmean
2773:; Post,
2549:270, 271
2399:Telephus
2324:Pompeian
2270:; Huys,
2222:Odysseus
2051:; Page,
2045:Telephus
1995:Atalanta
1817:Telephus
1813:Telephus
1691:Odysseus
1677:99, 100.
1606:Dignas,
1456:Milesian
1452:Pergamon
1446:Pergamon
1440:Telephus
1409:Aphareus
1405:Telephus
1401:Moschion
1397:Cleophon
1389:Telephus
1358:Telephus
1351:Telephus
1347:Telephus
1328:Telephus
1303:Telephus
1280:Telephus
1257:Thyestes
1253:Meleager
1241:Alcmaeon
1165:Etruscan
1149:Odysseus
1064:Dionysus
1056:Diomedes
1044:Phintias
926:Plutarch
918:Tyrensus
864:Pergamon
860:Gryneion
844:Achilles
824:Astyoche
746:Telephus
695:Etruscan
675:Telephus
557:Dionysus
541:, and a
535:Achilles
500:Achilles
401:Corythus
371:Armenian
345:Aleadae
337:Nauplius
303:Teuthras
280:Laomedon
262:Corythus
258:Nauplius
242:Teuthras
234:Heracles
177:Telepinu
147:back to
137:Achaeans
133:Achilles
121:Teuthras
105:Heracles
101:Tēlephos
52:Telephus
6716:Servius
6702:Troades
6640:Elegies
6588:Romulus
6299:Tristia
6088:Fabulae
6084:Library
6077:Fabulae
5568:Poetics
5394:Smith,
5379:3.26.10
5369:–
5352:–
5208:410-490
5187:325-340
5064:1459b.6
5060:Poetics
4888:Poetics
4641:Hiketes
4291:Romulus
4190:4.33.12
4173:Fabulae
4168:Hyginus
4143:Servius
4069:Fabulae
4064:Hyginus
4056:Odyssey
4030:Fabulae
4025:Hyginus
3992:Fabulae
3987:Hyginus
3901:Servius
3877:Odyssey
3804:Odyssey
3749:Fabulae
3744:Hyginus
3336:Troades
3308:Tristia
3217:Calchas
3143:Fabulae
3138:Hyginus
2963:Fabulae
2958:Hyginus
2893:–
2870:13.1.69
2759:Mysians
2755:Mysians
2747:Poetics
2685:Aleadae
2672:Fabulae
2667:Hyginus
2630:Fabulae
2625:Hyginus
2612:Fabulae
2607:Hyginus
2457:13.1.69
2373:Tzetzes
2251:Aleadae
2172:13.1.69
2133:Fabulae
2128:Hyginus
2061:4.33.12
2028:Fabulae
2023:Hyginus
2011:4.33.11
1986:Fabulae
1981:Hyginus
1961:4.33.11
1892:Fabulae
1887:Hyginus
1870:4.33.11
1842:Aleadae
1834:Aleadae
1804:Fabulae
1799:Hyginus
1733:3.3 (=
1723:13.1.69
1674:Fabulae
1669:Hyginus
1640:–
1595:Argiope
1577:3.3 (=
1567:4.33.11
1558:Fabulae
1553:Hyginus
1485:Arcadia
1421:Mysians
1385:Mysians
1381:Agathon
1324:Mysians
1305:, and
1299:Mysians
1291:Aleadae
1284:Mysians
1276:Mysians
1249:Orestes
1245:Oedipus
1231:H 5697.
1216:Orestes
1128:Etruria
1076:metopes
1028:Boeotia
914:Tarchon
893:of the
879:Agriope
871:Laodice
856:Servius
836:Machaon
811:Odyssey
792:by the
761:Laodice
683:Orestes
617:Odyssey
614:or the
604:Sources
510:300 BC)
486:Summary
466:Mysians
461:Poetics
458:in the
444:Aleadae
420:Mysians
416:Hyginus
409:Aleadae
325:Aleadae
313:Aleadae
287:Arcadia
268:Sources
226:Arcadia
208:Summary
173:Hittite
169:tragedy
157:Trojans
96:Τήλεφος
6877:
6862:
6843:
6817:
6798:
6772:Strabo
6764:
6745:
6697:Seneca
6689:
6674:
6606:
6572:
6543:
6518:
6497:Pindar
6485:
6400:
6385:
6282:
6222:
6203:
6177:
6145:
6130:
6122:
6114:
6096:
6064:
6035:Horace
5987:
5959:
5953:(LIMC)
5941:
5922:
5907:
5866:
5851:
5843:
5825:
5810:
5795:
5780:
5765:
5703:
5675:
5656:
5629:
5606:
5600:(LIMC)
5515:, in
5443:Aelian
5428:8.45.7
5404:8.54.6
5383:5.13.3
5277:p. 150
5144:p. 447
4961:p. 553
4948:p. 558
4931:p. 553
4792:34.152
4726:207332
4704:98.931
4695:; AVI
4693:205037
4626:8.47.2
4561:8.45.7
4553:p. 233
4538:; AVI
4536:200122
4514:9.31.2
4262:1.28.1
4147:Virgil
4139:p. 120
4086:E.5.12
4078:13.1.7
4074:Strabo
4072:112;
3983:3.26.9
3950:E.5.12
3930:3.12.3
3905:Virgil
3865:p. 542
3848:E.5.12
3825:3.26.9
3778:320038
3697:Kypria
3693:2.2.26
3672:E.3.20
3646:34.152
3629:E.3.20
3559:Cypria
3555:98.931
3546:; AVI
3544:205037
3527:207332
3463:, and
3447:Pindar
3443:E.3.17
3426:Scyros
3402:. The
3396:Cypria
3391:Cypria
3331:Seneca
3290:2.2.26
3265:Epodes
3260:Horace
3243:34.152
3215:where
3174:. For
3152:E.3.20
3130:Cypria
3125:Cypria
3084:; AVI
3082:200122
3060:E.3.17
3052:p. 148
3009:E.3.17
2984:9.5.14
2972:E.3.17
2936:Pindar
2906:Cypria
2901:Cypria
2866:12.8.4
2862:Strabo
2792:p. 216
2763:p. 150
2710:p. 217
2698:p. 150
2635:Aelian
2589:As in
2477:12.8.4
2473:12.8.2
2469:p. 261
2453:Strabo
2365:p. 260
2340:p. 262
2332:8.47.4
2322:3.3).
2243:p. 293
2226:p. 286
2168:Strabo
2092:p. 544
2090:Hard,
1917:8.54.6
1913:8.48.7
1862:p. 261
1858:p. 293
1838:p. 293
1719:12.8.4
1715:12.8.2
1711:Strabo
1707:p. 261
1695:p. 286
1608:p. 124
1526:p. 433
1436:Accius
1432:Ennius
1430:poets
1393:Iophon
1225:Apulia
1185:Naples
1169:Berlin
1136:pelike
1100:Naples
1006:Caicus
982:Berlin
887:Nireus
846:' son
840:Nireus
790:hydria
784:Attica
742:Cypria
715:Naples
699:Berlin
669:, and
653:E 382.
647:pelike
636:Pindar
632:Cypria
623:Cypria
475:Amphis
470:Alexis
385:Caicus
381:Strabo
333:Athena
299:Caicus
197:Naples
149:Sparta
42:MA 75.
40:Louvre
6917:Tegea
6705:, in
6452:) in
6250:) in
6017:Homer
5999:Homer
5412:1.8.6
5328:1.4.6
4965:p. 33
4935:p. 33
4836:p. 58
4796:35.71
4788:25.42
4779:Pliny
4488:6, 7.
4294:2.1.5
4051:Homer
4033:113;
4009:E.5.1
3995:113;
3958:6.120
3922:6.136
3903:, On
3881:p. 58
3799:Homer
3650:35.71
3642:25.42
3633:Pliny
3616:p. 58
3531:kylix
3421:Iliad
3327:29-30
3322:; ],
3247:35.71
3239:25.42
3230:Pliny
3209:Iliad
3204:Homer
3146:101;
3014:Iliad
2980:1.4.6
2966:101;
2878:3.9.1
2788:2.7.4
2775:p. 16
2706:2.7.4
2675:244;
2663:2.7.4
2655:p. 33
2565:3.9.1
2537:3.9.1
2521:3.9.1
2517:2.7.4
2442:3.3).
2420:p. 82
2377:Frogs
2164:8.4.9
2069:3.9.1
2019:3.9.1
1977:3.9.1
1905:3.9.1
1901:2.7.4
1763:3.9.1
1759:2.7.4
1541:3.9.1
1537:2.7.4
1495:Notes
1428:Roman
1223:from
1140:Vulci
1124:kylix
1118:, or
1112:Attic
1106:6591.
806:Homer
765:Priam
751:Iliad
611:Iliad
585:Argos
552:Iliad
547:Homer
246:Mysia
222:Tegea
218:Aleus
203:9008.
145:Helen
127:, in
125:Mysia
117:Tegea
113:Aleus
91:Greek
36:Paris
6875:ISBN
6860:ISBN
6841:ISBN
6815:ISBN
6796:ISBN
6762:ISBN
6743:ISBN
6687:ISBN
6672:ISBN
6604:ISBN
6570:ISBN
6541:ISBN
6516:ISBN
6501:Odes
6483:ISBN
6398:ISBN
6383:ISBN
6346:Ovid
6327:Ibis
6322:Ovid
6294:Ovid
6280:ISBN
6246:(or
6220:ISBN
6201:ISBN
6175:ISBN
6143:ISBN
6128:ISBN
6120:ISBN
6112:ISBN
6094:ISBN
6062:ISBN
5985:ISBN
5957:ISBN
5939:ISBN
5920:ISBN
5905:ISBN
5864:ISBN
5849:ISBN
5841:ISBN
5823:ISBN
5808:ISBN
5793:ISBN
5778:ISBN
5763:ISBN
5701:ISBN
5673:ISBN
5654:ISBN
5627:ISBN
5604:ISBN
5571:in
4850:LIMC
4828:LIMC
4810:LIMC
4765:LIMC
4759:LIMC
4753:LIMC
4747:LIMC
4718:LIMC
4697:2674
4681:LIMC
4666:LIMC
4646:LIMC
4607:V.2
4597:LIMC
4575:LIMC
4540:7395
4528:LIMC
4500:LIMC
4485:LIMC
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