In Greek mythology Eurytion (or, alternatively, Eurythion). "widely-honoured", was a name attributed to six individuals.
- The king of Phthia, son of either Actor, or of Ctimenus, or of Irus and Demonassa, and father of Antigone (not to be confused with the daughter of Oedipus Rex). In Phthia, Peleus was purified by Eurytion for the murder of Phocus and married Antigone, Eurytion's daughter. Peleus accidentally killed Eurytion during the hunt for the Calydonian Boar and fled Phthia.
- A centaur of Arcadia who demanded to marry the daughter of Dexamenus of Olenus, either Mnesimache or Deianira, or who threatened violence against his daughter Hippolyta. Her father was forced to agree, but Heracles intervened on her behalf and killed the wild horseman.
- Another centaur, of Thessaly, who attempted to carry off the bride of Peirithous, king of the Lapiths, on their wedding day. He and his fellows were killed in the fight with the Lapiths that followed, the Centauromachy
- Son of Ares and the Hesperid Erytheia, who bore him "beside the silver-rooted boundless waters of the river Tartessus, in the hollow of a rock," according to a Strabo's quote from a lost poem of Stesichoros. He, and the two-headed dog Orthrus, were the guardians of the cattle of Geryon and was killed by Hercules.
- This Eurytion was also used as a character in the Percy Jackson book The Battle of the Labyrinth.
- A Trojan archer during the Trojan War.[1]
- A son of Kenethos and Cerion recognized as one of the Argonauts; he was involved in the hunt for the Calydonian Boar and was accidentally killed by Peleus.
References[]
- ↑ Virgil. Aeneid. Book V, 514.
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