Antiphates

In Greek mythology, Antiphates (/ænˈtɪfətz/; Ancient Greek: Ἀντιφάτης) is the name of five characters.

  • Antiphates, King of the Laestrygones, a mythological tribe of gigantic cannibals. He was married and had a daughter. When he was visited by a scouting party sent by Odysseus, he ate one of the men on the spot and raised a hue-and-cry to ensure most of the rest of Odysseus' company would be hunted down.
  • Antíphates, a Trojan warrior, slain by Leonteus.[1]
  • Antiphatês, son of Melampus and Iphianeira, the daughter of Megapenthes. He married Zeuxippe, the daughter of Hippocoon. Their children were Oecles and Amphalces.[2][3]
  • Antiphates, one of Greek warriors who hid in the Trojan horse.[4]
  • Antiphates, son of Sarpedon. Who accompanied Aeneas to Italy where he was killed by Turnus.[5]

Notes

gollark: Well, not literal interest, whatever.
gollark: Stock market™ investing produces 7%ish returns a year, 4% or so factoring in inflation, so if you have, er, 25x the money you need per year as initial cashmoney, you can just run it off interest.
gollark: that would be manual.
gollark: Not what I was thinking!
gollark: I suppose it *may* be possible to autogenerate money?

References

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