Penthilus of Messenia

In Greek mythology, Penthilus (/ˈpɛnθɪləs/; Greek: Πένθιλος) was a king of Messenia, son of Periclymenus and father of Borus. In early accounts, he was the son of Borus and Lysidice instead. Penthilus married Anchirhoe and became the father of Andropompus, father of King Melanthus of Athens.[1]

Reference

  1. Scholia on Plato, Symposium, 208d, citing Hellanicus
gollark: Well, your method is accursuous as C's. Generally there is special support for it somehow, and the module just gets parsed enough to provide an interface and types and whatever then merged with the other stuff to compile later™.
gollark: No. Bad.
gollark: Quadtrees.
gollark: <@!319753218592866315> I'll be PRing it to Macron immediately.
gollark: The sparse octree representation of strings is perfect and without flaw.
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