Adrastus (mythology)

Adrastus (Ancient Greek: Ἄδραστος; Ionic: Adrestus Ἄδρηστος means "inescapable") refers to several individuals in Greek mythology:

  • Adrastus, king of Argos.
  • Adrastus, father of Eurydice, the wife of King Ilus of Troy.[1] He is otherwise unknown, but the Hellespont town or city of Adrastea may be named after him.
  • Adrastus, who together with his son, Hipponous, were said to have thrown themselves into fire in obedience to an oracle of Apollo.[2]
  • Adrastus, father of Hippodamia, wife of Peirithous, who was attempted by the Centaurs to carry off.[3]
  • Adrastus, son of Polynices and Argea, daughter of the Argive Adrastus. He was a leader of the Mycenaeans during the Trojan War and was also counted as one of the Epigoni.[4][5]
  • Adrastus, a son of Merops, the king of Percote, and brother to Amphius. Along with Amphius, he led a military force from Adrastea, Apaesus, Pityeia and Tereia to the Trojan War (despite the entreaties of their father, a seer, who could foresee that death awaited them on the battlefield). Adrastus was slain by Diomedes.[6]
  • Adrastus, a warrior Trojan, killed by Agamennon.[7]

See also

Notes

  1. Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.12.3
  2. Hyginus, Fabulae 242
  3. Hyginus, Fabulae 33
  4. Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis 268
  5. Pausanias, Graeciae Descriptio 2.20.5
  6. Homer, Iliad 2.828 & 11.328
  7. Homer, Iliad 6

References

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