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Adrastus

In Greek mythology, Adrastus or Adrestus (Ancient Greek: Ἄδραστος or Ἄδρηστος),[1] (perhaps meaning "the inescapable"),[2] was a king of Argos, and leader of the Seven against Thebes. He was the son of the Argive king Talaus, but was forced out of Argos by his dynastic rival Amphiaraus. He fled to Sicyon, where he became king. Later he reconciled with Amphiaraus and returned to Argos as its king.

Because of an oracle Adrastus married his daughters to the exiles Polynices and Tydeus and promised to restore them to their homelands. He first assembled an army to place Polynices on the throne of Thebes, led by seven champions, famously called the Seven against Thebes. The expedition failed and all the champions died except Adrastus, saved by his divine horse Arion. He went with the Epigoni, the sons of the Seven, in the successful second war against Thebes, and was said to have died on his way home.

Adrastus is mentioned as early as Homer's Iliad, and his story was (presumably) told in the Cyclic Thebaid. He figures prominently in the poetry of Pindar, and is a main character in Euripides' The Suppliants. His story was told by Diodorus Siculus, Hyginus, Statius, and Apollodorus. He was said to be the founder of the Nemean Games, had hero cults at Sicyon, Megara, and Colonus, and was depicted in works of art from as early as the 6th century BC.[3]

Family Edit

Homer's Illiad mentions Adrastus, but without giving any ancestry.[4] The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women (without mentioning Adrastus) has Talaus as the son of Bias and Pero,[5] and from the lyric poets Bacchylides and Pindar we first hear that Adrastus was the son of Talaus, who according to Apollonius of Rhodes was an Argonaut.[6] No early sources say who Adrastus' mother was, however, late sources give three different names:[7] Lysimache, the daughter of Abas,[8] Lysianassa, the daughter of Polybus,[9] or Eurynome.[10] The Iliad mentions a daughter of Adrastus, Aegiale,[11] and the logographer Hellanicus of Lesbos mentions a son, Aegialeus.[12]

The mythographer Apollodorus gives the following genealogy. Adrastus' father was Talus, who was the son of Bias and Pero. His mother was Lysimache, the daughter of Abas, son of Melampus. He had four younger brothers, Parthenopaeus, Pronax, Mecisteus, and Aristomachus, and a sister Eriphyle. Adrastus married Amphithea, the daughter of his brother Pronax, by whom he had three daughters, Argia, Deipyle, and Aegiale, and two sons, Aegialeus and Cyanippus.[13]

Adrastus' daughters had several notable husbands and sons. Argia married Polynices, the son of the Thebean king Oedipus, and Deipyle married Tydeus, the son of the Calydonian king Oeneus.[14] According to Hyginus, Diomedes, who fought in the Trojan War, was the son of Deipyle and Tydeus, and Thersander (one of the Epigoni) was the son of Argia and Polynices.[15] In the Iliad, another of Adrastus' daughters, Aegiale, is the wife of Diomedes.[16] Hyginus, also says that Hippodamia, the wife of King Pirithous of the Lapiths, was the daughter of an Adrastus, possibly referring to this Adrastus.[17]

Mythology Edit

The Iliad refers to Adrastus as king of Sicyon,[18] but does not explain how a son of the Argive king Talaus, came to rule Sicyon. However, later sources tell of a dispute, of some sort, between the descendants of Bias and his brother Melampus—two of the most powerful families in the Argolid—involving Adrastus, the grandson of Bias, and Amphiaraus, the son of Oicles, a grandson of Melampus.[19] According to Pindar, at one time the sons of Talaus ruled Argos but were "overpowered by discord" and Adrastus fled Argos and went to Sicyon to escape Amphiaraus, and that during his reign there, he founded the Sicyonian games.[20]

Pindar does not say what circumstances caused Adrastus to flee from Argos to Sicyon, or how he became its king, but later sources do.[21] According to one version, after Adrastus' brother Pronax, who was king of Argos, died, Adrastus fled to Sicyon, where his mother's father Polybus was king, and eventually inherited the Sicyonian throne.[22] While according to another, Adrastus fled to Sicyon after Amphiaraus killed Talaus, and got the throne by marrying Polybus' daughter.[23]

In any case, Adrastus became king of Sicyon. Then, according to Pindar, Adrastus (and his brothers) were able to effect a reconciliation with Amphiaraus by giving him their sister Eriphyle in marriage, and Adrastus was able to return to Argos and assume the Argive throne.[24]

Adrastus was the owner of the fabulously fast horse Arion,[25] who was the offspring of Posidon and Demeter when they mated in horse form.[26] Adrastus was given Arion by Heracles,[27] and the horse saved Adrastus' life during the war of the Seven against Thebes, when all the other champions of the expedition were killed.[28]

Adrastus seems to have had a reputation as a skillful speaker.[29]

Seven against Thebes Edit

The war of the Seven against Thebes resulted from a quarrel between Oedipus' sons Polynices and Eteocles over the kingship of Thebes, which left Eteocles on the throne, and Polynices in exile.[30] One night, Polynices arrived at Adrastus' palace seeking shelter. He found a place to sleep, but soon after Tydeus, the exiled son of the Calydonian king Oeneus, also arrived seeking shelter, and the two began to fight over the same space. When Adrastus discovered Polynices and Tydeus fighting like wild beasts (or in later accounts when he saw that Polynices wore the hyde of a lion and that Tydeus wore the Hyde of a Boar, or that they had those animals on their shields), he remembered an oracle of Apollo that said he should marry his daughters to a lion and a boar. So Adrastus gave his daughters, Argia to Polynices, and Deipyle to Tydeus, and promised to restore them to their kingdoms, beginning with Polynices.[31]

Adrastus proceeded to assemble a large Argive army to attack Thebes, appointing seven champions to be its leaders. These became known as the Seven against Thebes. One of those chosen, the seer Amphiaraus, had foreseen that the expedition was doomed to fail, and that all of the champions but Adrastus would die, and so refused to join. But when Polynices bribed Amphiaraus' wife Eriphyle to tell her husband to join the expedition, he was forced to obey because of a promise Amphiaraus had made to allow his wife, who was also Adrastus' sister, to settle any disputes between the two men.[32]

Adrastus and his army were forced to stop for water at Nemea, where they became involved in the death of the child-hero Opheltes. There Adrastus held funeral games in Opheltes' honor, in which he won the horse race with his horse Arion. These games were said to have been the origin of the Nemean Games.[33]

As the seer Amphiaraus had foretold, the expedition ended in disaster at Thebes. All of the champions perished, except for Adrastus who was saved by the speed of his divine horse Arion.[34] According to accounts first occurring in fifth-century BC Greek tragedy, after the failed assault on Thebes, Creon, who with the death of Etecles became the new ruler of Thebes, forbade the burial of the expeditions' dead. Athenian tradition held that Theseus, the king and founder-hero of Athens, assisted Adrastus in recovering the bodies of his fallen comrades.[35]

One of the "Seven" Edit

Prior to the fifth century BC, the number and names of the "seven" champions is uncertain.[36] The first certain reference to the number of champions being seven, along with a list of their names, occurs in Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes. Adrastus—although present at the battle—is not considered by Aeschylus to be one of the "Seven".[37] The same list of names is given in Euripides' The Suppliants, and Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus.[38] However, Euripides gives a slightly different list in The Phoenician Women, with Adrastus (instead of Eteoclus) as one of the Seven, and this list will be followed by the Greek historian Diodorus Siculus, the mythographers Apollodorus and Hyginus, and the Latin poet Statius.[39] In The Phoenician Women and Apollodorus (as in the Seven Against Thebes) each of the Seven is assigned to one of the seven gates of Thebes, with Adrastus being assigned the "Seventh" gate, in The Phoenician Women, and the "Homoloidian" gate in Apollodorus.

Second war against Thebes Edit

Ten years after the failed expedition against Thebes, to avenge their father's deaths, the sons of the fallen Seven, who were called the Epigoni ("Afterborn"), marched again on Thebes. Adrastus accompanied them on this second Theban expedition, called the war of the Epigoni.[40] This time (according to Pindar) the omens foretold success for the expedition, but death for Adrastus' son Aegialeus.[41] According to Hyginus, as Adrastus was the only one of the Seven to survive the first expedition, his son Aegialeus was the only one of the Epigoni to die in the second.[42]

Death Edit

According to Pausanias, the Megarians said that Adrastus, leading the Argive army home after taking Thebes, died at Megara of old age and grief for the death of his son, and was honored there.[43] However Hyginus says that, in accordance with an oracle of Apollo, Adrastus and his son Hipponous killed themselves by throwing themselves into a fire.[44]

Principal sources Edit

The Iliad, Stesichorus, and the Thebaid Edit

There are only a few surviving references to Adrastus before the 5th century BC. The Iliad has four passing mentions of Adrastus. It describes him as being "at the first" the king of Sicyon,[45] and his "swift horse" Arion, being "of heavenly stock".[46] It mentions his daughter Aegiale being the wife of Diomedes,[47] and another daughter of his marrying Tydeus.[48]

The lyric poet Stesichorus (c. 630 – 555 BC) apparently wrote a poem (now lost) about the war against Thebes,[49] in which Adrastus would presumably have figured. A fragment from the poem mentions Adrastus giving a daughter to Polynices.[50]

The Cyclic Thebaid (early sixth century BC?)[51] was a Greek epic poem whose entire subject was the Seven's Theban war, however only a few fragments have survived.[52] One fragment has Adrastus being the only one saved at Thebes, thanks to his horse Arion.[53] Another fragment has Adrastus lamenting the death of Amphiaraus.[54] Much of the later tradition concerning Adrastus probably derives from this work.[55]

Pindar Edit

The 5th-century lyric poet Pindar mentions Adrastus in several of his poems. He devotes twenty lines of his Nemian 9 to Adrastus, and the expedition of the Seven against Thebes.[56] He begins by praising Adrastus as the founder of the Sicyonian games, which Pindar says Adrastus did during his reign as king of Sicyon:

Let us rouse up, then, the resounding lyre and rouse the pipe for the very apex of contests
for horses, which Adrastus established for Phoebus by the streams of Asopus. Having mentioned them,
I shall exalt the hero with fame-bringing honors,
who, reigning there [Sicyon] at that time, made the city famous
by glorifying it with new festivals and contests for men’s strength and with polished chariots.[57]

He then tells of a dispute between Adrastus and the seer Amphiaraus, which resulted in Adrastus and his brothers being overthrown, and Adrastus fleeing Argos:

For in time past, to escape bold-counseling Amphiaraus and terrible civil strife, he had fled
from his ancestral home and Argos. No longer were Talaus’ [Adrastus' father] sons rulers; they had been overpowered by discord.[58]

And how Ardastus and Amphiaraus were reconciled by Adrastus giving his sister Eriphyle to Ampiaraus:

But the stronger man puts an end to a former dispute.
After giving man-subduing Eriphyle as a faithful pledge
to Oecles’ son [Amphiaraus] for a wife, they became the greatest of the fair-haired Danaans . . .[59]

After which, Adrastus was a leader of the disastrous ill-omened expedition of the Seven against Thebes:

and later they led an army of men to seven-gated Thebes
on a journey with no favorable omens, and Cronus’ son brandished his lightning and urged them not to set out
recklessly from home, but to forgo the expedition.
But after all, the host was eager to march, with bronze
weapons and cavalry gear, into obvious disaster, and on the banks of the Ismenus
they laid down their sweet homecoming and fed the white-flowering smoke with their bodies,
for seven pyres feasted on the men’s young limbs. But for Amphiaraus’ sake, Zeus split the deep-bosomed
earth with his almighty thunderbolt and buried him with his team,
before being struck in the back by Periclymenus' spear
and suffering disgrace in his warrior spirit.[60]

Pindar attributes the founding of the Nemean Games to Adrastus.[61] And, after the death of Amphiaraus, Pindar has Adrastus say: "I dearly miss the eye of my army, good both as a seer and at fighting with the spear."[62]

In Pythian 8, Pindar mentions Ardastus receiving a prophecy from the dead Amphiaraus during the battle of the Epigoni at Thebes:[63]

... he who suffered in a former defeat,
the hero Adrastus,
is now met with news
of better omen, but in his own household
he will fare otherwise: for he alone from the Danaan army
will gather the bones of his dead son and with the favor
of the gods will come with his host unharmed

The Suppliants Edit

Adrastus is a principal character in Euripides' tragedy The Suppliants (c. 420 BC).[64] The action of the play takes place after the disastrous defeat of the Seven against Thebes, and the refusal of Creon, the new Theban king, to allow the burial of the expedition's dead. Adrastus has come to Eleusis seeking the Athenians' help in recovering the bodies of the fallen warriors.

In the play we hear for the first time an account of why Adrastus made war on Thebes.[65] In an initial interview, Adrastus tells Theseus, the king of Athens, that because of an oracle of Apollo, he had given his daughters (unnamed) to Polynices and Theseus, and that, because of the "crime" done to Polynices by his brother Eteocles, who had stolen "his property" (i.e. the Theban throne), Adrastus marched "seven companies against Thebes".[66] Theseus then asks Adrastus whether he consulted seers and the gods before making war on Thebes, and Adrastus answers that, not only did he go to war "without the gods’ good will", he also "went against the wish of Amphiaraus."[67]

Finally persuaded to help recover the dead, Theseus leads an Athenian army to Thebes, where he defeats the Thebans in battle and brings back the dead warriors to Eleusis. Adrastus then, in a long speech of 60 lines, eulogizes the fallen champions.[68]

Late sources Edit

The Greek historian Diodorus Siculus (first century BC), the Roman mythographer Hyginus (c. 64 BC – AD 17), the Latin poet Statius (c. 45—c. 96), and the Greek mythographer Apollodorus (first or second century AD), all gave accounts of Adrastus' story.

Diodorus Siculus Edit

According to Diodorus Siculus, Polynices fled Thebes, when Eteocles refused to give up the kingship, as had been agreed, and Tydeus fled Calydon, after killing his cousins. The two princes came to Argos where "Adrastus received both the fugitives kindly". As in Euripides, because of an oracle, Adrastus married his daughters Argia to Polynices and Deipyle to Tydeus, and promised to restore the exiles to their native kingdoms.[69] Adrastus decided to deal with Thebes first. So he sent his son-in-law Tydeus on an embassy to negotiate a peaceful return for Polynices. Upon learning of the failure of Tydeus' mission, Adrastus began organizing an expedition against Thebes.[70]

The seer Amphiaraus refused to take part, at first, because he knew if he did he would die. But Polynices gave Amphiaraus's wife Eriphyle the necklace of Harmonia, so that she would persuade her husband to join the expedition. Diodorus reports that "at the time" Adrastus and Amphiaraus were "at variance ... striving for the kingship", and they agreed that Eriphyle, Adrastus' sister and Amphiaraus's wife, would settle the matter. And when Eriphyle "awarded the victory to Adrastus" saying that the expedition "should be undertaken", Amphiaraus agreed to go.[71]

Adrastus recruited Capaneus, Hippomedon and Parthenopaeus, the son of Atalanta, to join himself, Polynices, Tydeus, and Amphiaraus as the seven leaders of the "notable army", the same list of Seven as in Euripides' The Phoenician Women.[72] Omitting any mention of the Seven's stop at Nemea, Diodorus next gives an account of the battle at Thebes. As always, all of the Seven died, except Adrastus. As for the burial of the Seven, Diodorus (with no mention of Creon or Theseus) says that the Thebans refused to allow Adrastus to remove the dead, so he went home to Argos, and (as in Euripides' The Suppliants) the Athenians recovered the bodies and buried them.[73]

Hyginus Edit

In his Fabulae, Hyginus gives an account of Adrastus' story, mostly in accord with earlier sources.[74] Following Bacchylides, Pindar, and Euripides, Hyginus says that Adrastus was the son of Talaus, however Hyginus provides the name of a mother, Eurynome.[75] Following Euripides, Hyginus says that Adrastus had received an oracle of Apollo which said he would marry his daughters to a lion and a boar, and that, when Polynices, wearing the hide of a lion, and Tydeus, wearing the hide of a boar, arrived at Adrastus' court, Adrastus remembered the oracle and so married his older daughter, Argia, to Polynices, and his younger daughter Deipyle, to Tydeus.[76] He adds that Thersander (one of the Epigoni) was the son of Argia and Polynices, and that Diomedes (who fought at Troy, and another of the Epigoni) was the son of Deipyle and Tydeus.[77]

At Polynices request, Adrastus assembled an army to take back the kingship of Thebes from Eteocles. Adrastus chose "seven generals" (including himself) for the army because the walls of Thebes had seven gates.[78] The army stops at Nemea in search of water, Opheltes is killed by a snake, Adrastus and the Seven kill the snake and establish funeral games in the child's honor.[79] At Thebes, all of the Seven die except Adrastus.[80]

Statius Edit

Just as the Cyclic Thebaid had been, the Latin poet Statius's Thebaid (c. 92 AD), is devoted entirely to the Seven against Thebes.[81] An epic poem in 12 books, it gives the most detailed account of Adrastus' story.

In Book 1, the situations at Thebes and Argos are described. In Thebes, Polynices and Eteocles having agreed to rule in alternate years,[82] Eteocles occupies the throne, while Polynices is in exile for a year.[83] While in Argos:

There king Adrastus governed his people in tranquillity, verging from life’s midway into old age. Rich was he in ancestry, back to Jove on either side. The better sex he lacked, but flourished in female offspring, supported by twin pledge of daughters. To him Phoebus prophesied (a deadly prodigy to tell, but the truth of it was soon revealed) that husbands for them were on their way by fate’s leading: a bristly pig and a tawny lion. That pondering, neither the father himself nor Amphiaraus skilled in futurity sees light, for Apollo the source forbids. Only in the parental heart anxiety sits and festers.[84]

One night, during a raging storm, Polynices and Tydeus (also an exile) separately arrive at Adrastus' palace in Argos seeking refuge. They quarrel over the same bit of shelter, a fight breaks out, Adrastus is awoken, and separates them. He invites the two inside, and notices that Polynices wears a lion's pelt and that Tydeus a boar's skin and tusks, and by these signs, Adrastus recognizes in Polynices and Tydeus, the husbands that had been prophesied for his two daughters.[85] Adrastus feasts the young princes and introduces them to his daughters.[86]

The next day, in Book 2, Polynices and Tydeus accept Adrastus' offer of his daughters Argia and Deipyle in marriage, and Adrastus promises to help the two exiles regain their native kingdoms.[87] Adrastus sends Tydeus to Thebes to see if Eteocles will peacefully surrender his crown. At Thebes, Eteocles rejects Tydeus' arguments that, since his year of rule is over, he should give over the kingship to Polynices.[88] On his way back to Argos, Tydeus is ambushed by fifty Thebans, and kills all of these but Maeon.[89]

In Book 3, on returning to Argos, the wounded Tydeus urges an immediate attack of Thebes, an action the angry crowd supports.[90] But addressing Polynices, Adrastus "deep of counsel and no novice in manipulating the weight of command" urges restraint:[91]

Leave all this, I pray you, to the High Ones and my care for remedy. Neither shall your brother wield the sceptre and you fail of satisfaction nor yet are we eager to let war loose. But now all welcome Oeneus’ noble son triumphing in so great a bloodshed. Let rest at last relax his courageous spirit. For my part indignation shall not go short of reason[92]

Adrastus consults the seers Amphiaraus and Melampus who receive omens too terrifying to divulge. Meanwhile the Argives eagerly arm themselves, and at "the sad kings door" demand war.[93] Amphiaraus is finally forced to reveal what he has foreseen: death and defeat at Thebes, but the Argives are undeterred.[94] Argia, now Polynices' wife, tearfully urges her father Adrastus to make war on Thebes, who begins assembling an army.[95]

In Book 4, the expedition sets out from Argos with Adrastus leading the first of the seven contingents:

King Adrastus, sad and sick with weight of cares and nearer to departing years, walks scarce of his own accord amid words of good cheer, content with the steel that girds his side; soldiers bear his shield behind him. His driver grooms the swift horses right at the gate and Arion is already fighting the yoke. ... This band, three thousand strong, follows Adrastus exulting. ... He himself joins them, venerable alike in years and sceptre, like a bull moving tall among the pastures he has long possessed; his neck is slack now and his shoulders empty, but still he is the leader; the steers have no stomach to attempt him in battle, for they see his horns broken from many a blow and the massive nodules of breast wounds.[96]

In desperate need of water the expedition is forced to stop at Nemea.[97] There they encounter Hypsipyle, the nurse of the infant Opheltes, and Adrastus urgently asks her to lead them to water, which she does.[98]

Meanwhile, in Book 5, the unattended Opheltes is killed by a serpent, and the infant's father the king, holding Hypsipyle responsible, intends to kill her with his sword.[99] The Archive champions rush to defend Hypsipyle—their army's savior—and Nemeans rally to their king, but Adrastus and Amphiaraus intercede, preventing an armed clash.[100] A rumor of Hypsipyle's imminent death reaches the Archive army, and they attack the palace, but Adrastus is able to stop them by racing to the palace with Hypsipyle in his chariot to show his army that she is safe.[101]

In Book 6, Adrastus presides over games held in honor of Opheltes.[102] As a final honor, Adrastus is asked to give a display of his prowess with the bow or spear. He gladly complies, choosing a tree a great distance away as a target. Adrastus shoots an arrow, which hits the tree, but bounces all the way back to his feet. An ill omen: "the shaft promised its master a war from which he alone would return, a sad homecoming."[103]

In Book 7, the expedition arrives at Thebes, and the fighting begins and continues through Book 11. One by one each of the Seven champions die, all except Polynices and Adrastus. The brothers Polynices and Eteocles, having agreed to fight in single combat to decide the war, Adrastus drives his chariot between them and tries to stop them:[104]

Sons of Inachus and Tyrians, shall we then watch this wickedness? Where is right and the gods, where war? Persist not in your passion. I pray you desist, my enemy—though did this anger permit, you too are not far from me in blood; you, my son-in-law, I also command. If you so much desire a sceptre, I put off my royal raiment, go, have Lerna and Argos to yourself.[105]

But when Polynices and Eteocles refuse to stop, Adrastus flees:[106]

leaving it all behind—camp, men, son-in-law, Thebes—and drives Arion on as he turns in the yoke and warns of Fate.[107]

Apollodorus Edit

Apollodorus also gives an account of Adrastus story. Apollodorus gives the following genealogy:

Bias and Pero had a son Talaus, who married Lysimache, daughter of Abas, son of Melampus, and had by her Adrastus, Parthenopaeus, Pronax, Mecisteus, Aristomachus, and Eriphyle, whom Amphiaraus married. Parthenopaeus had a son Promachus, who marched with the Epigoni against Thebes; and Mecisteus had a son Euryalus, who went to Troy. Pronax had a son Lycurgus; and Adrastus had by Amphithea, daughter of Pronax, three daughters, Argia, Deipyle, and Aegialia, and two sons, Aegialeus and Cyanippus.[108]

According to Apollodorus, Polynices, being banished from Thebes by Eteocles, came to Argos one night and fought with Tydeus. They were heard by Adrastus, who separated them. Adrastus, noticing their shields, one with a lion and the other a boar, remembered an oracle which told him that he should marry his daughters to "a boar and a lion", and married his daughters Argia and Deipyle to the two young men. Adrastus promised to restore both his son-in-laws to their kingdoms, and "eager to march against Thebes" first, began to assembled an army.[109]

The seer Amphiaraus, having foreseen that all, except Adrastus, who went to Thebes were destined to die, at first refused to join Adrastus' expedition. But, as part of the resolution of an old dispute between Adrastus and Amphiaraus, Adrastus' sister Eriphyle had married Amphiaraus, and Amphiaraus had promised to let Eriphyle decide any future disputes between the two men. So, when Polynices bribed Amphiaraus' wife Eriphyle to tell her husband to join the expedition, he was forced to obey.[110] In addition to himself, his son-in-laws Polynices and Tydeus, and his brother-in-law Amphiaraus, Adrastus chose Capaneus, Hippomedon (who Apollodorus says according to some accounts was a brother of Adrastus), and Parthenopaeus, to be the seven leaders of the expedition against Thebes. However, as Apollodorus notes, some do not count Polynices and Tydeus as being among the seven, instead including Eteoclus, son of Iphis, and Mecisteus (another brother of Adrastus) in the list of the seven.[111]

At Thebes, when Capaneus was killed by Zeus' thunderbolt, Adrastus, and the rest of the Argive army fled, but "Adrastus alone was saved by his horse Arion".[112] When Creon forbade the burial of the Argive dead, Arastus having "fled to Athens and took refuge at the altar of Mercy, and laying on it the suppliant's bough he prayed that they would bury the dead", and Theseus and the Athenians captured Thebes and recovered the dead.[113]

Hero cult Edit

Adrastus had hero cults at Sicyon, Megara and Kolonos.[114] According to Herodotus, Adrastus had a hero shrine (heroon) in the marketplace at Sicyon, and, up until the reign of Cleisthenes of Sicyon (c. 600–560 BC), was celebrated there with "sacrifices and festivals" and "tragic choruses".[115] Pausanias says that Adrastus was "honored" at Megara, where presumably his tomb could be seen.[116] Pausanias also mentions a hero shrine at Kolonos in Attica.[117]

Iconography Edit

Adrastus appears in vase painting as early as the late 6th century BC. A Chalcidian calyx krater (c. 530 BC) depicts the arrival scene of the exiled princes Polynices and Tydeus at Adrastus' palace. On the right Adrastus (identified by inscription) reclines on a couch, with a woman (his wife?) standing beside him. They are both looking to the left where Tydeus (also named) and another man (presumed to be Polynices) are sitting on the ground with their mantles wrapped around them, with two women conversing standing over them (Adrastus' daughters?).[118]

Pausanias reports seeing Adrastus depicted on the Amyclae Throne of Apollo (6th century BC), along with Tydeus, stopping a fight between Amphiaraus and "Lycurgus the son of Pronax".[119] The same scene seems to have been depicted on a shield-strap from Olympia (B 1654),[120] as well as on a fragment from a Laconian cup by the Hunt Painter.[121]

Adrastus appears on an Etruscan gem from the first half of the 5th century BC (Berlin:Ch GI 194). With Adrastus are four of the Seven champions: Parthenopaeus, Amphiaraus, Polynices and Tydeus. Adrastus and Tydeus are standing, in arms, with the rest seated.[122] Pausanias also describes seeing a monument (c. 450s BC?) at Delphi which depicted the Seven, and included Adrastus.[123]

Pallor of Adrastus Edit

A line in Virgil's Aeneid has Aeneas, in the underworld, encounter "the pale shade of Adrastus" (Adrasti pallentis imago).[124] Servius, in his commentary, says this was in reference to Adrastus turning pale at the sight of the deaths at Thebes.[125] The "pallor of Adrastus" apparently became proverbial.[126]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Grimal, s.v. Adrastus 1; Parada, s.v. Adrastus 1. For Ἄδρηστος, see Herodotus, 5.67 .
  2. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Adrastus.
  3. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Adrastus; Grimal, s.v. Asrastus; Tripp, s.v. Adrastus (1); Brill's New Pauly, s.v. Adrastus; Parada, s.v. Adrastus 1; Smith, s.v. Adrastus 1.
  4. ^ For a discussion of the early sources for Adrastus' genealogy see Gantz, pp. 506–507. For genealogical tables containing Adrastus see Hard, p. 707, Table 14; and Grimal, p. 525, Table I.
  5. ^ Hesiod fr. 35 Most [= fr. 37 MW].
  6. ^ Bacchylides, 9.19; Pindar, Nemean 9.14, Olympian 6.15; see also Euripides, The Phoenician Women 422. For Talaus as an Argonaut see Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 2.110–111.
  7. ^ Parada, s.v. Adrastus 1.
  8. ^ Apollodorus, 1.9.13.
  9. ^ Pausanias, 2.6.6. Compare with Herodotus, 5.67, and a scholion to Pindar Nemean 9.30 (see Gantz, p. 507), where Adrastus' maternal grandfather is said to be Polybus.
  10. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 69, 70.
  11. ^ Homer, Iliad 5.410–415; compare with Apollodorus, 1.8.6.
  12. ^ Fowler 2013, p. 414; Gantz, p. 524; Fowler 2000, p. 191 (Hellanicus fr. 100 = FGrHist 4 F 100).
  13. ^ Apollodorus, 1.9.13. According to Hyginus Fabulae 71 his wife was Demonassa, and according to Fabulae 242 he had a son named Hipponous. According to other accounts Adrastus married a daughter of Polybus the king of Sicyon, see Gantz, pp. 507–508. For his daughters Argia and Deipyle, see also: Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.3; Hyginus Fabulae 69; Statius, Thebaid 2.203–204. Herodotus, 5.68, also has Aegialeus as Adrastus' son. According to Apollodorus, 1.8.6 some said that Aegiale was the daughter of Aegialeus, while according to Pausanias, 2.18.4, 2.30.10 Cyanippus was the son of Aegialeus, see Parada, s.vv. Aegialeus 1, Cyanippus.
  14. ^ Hard, p. 316; Gantz, pp. 508–509. Homer, Iliad 14.121, has Tydeus married to an unnamed daughter of Adrastus, while Stesichorus, fr. 222A Campbell [= P. Lille 76 + 73] lines 270-280, has the seer Tiresias tell Polynices that Adrastus will give him his daughter, also unnamed. Pherecydes, fr. 122a Fowler (Fowler 2008, p. 340) [= FGrHist 3 F 122 = Apollodorus 1.8.5] and fr. 122b Fowler (Fowler 2008, pp. 340–341) [= FGrHist 3 F 122 = Schol. (A, *B (4.45.3 Dindorf), D codd. CHVLa, Ge I (1.170.23 Nicole) +) Il. 14.119] name Deipyle as the daughter who married Tydeus. Euripides (see Hypsipyle fr. 753c, Oeneus fr. 558, The Phoenician Women 419–423, The Suppliants 133–136) has unnamed daughters married to Polynices and Tydeus. Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus 1302 has Polynices say that Adrastus was his father-in-law. Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.3; Hyginus Fabulae 69; Statius, Thebaid 2.203–204Apollodorus, 3.6.1, all have Argia marry Polynices and Deipyle marry Tydeus.
  15. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 69, 71; compare with Homer, Iliad 5.410, which has Diomedes as Tydeus' son, and 14.121, which says that Tydeus married a daughter of Adrastus; Pindar, Olympian 2.43–45, which has Polynices' son Thersander descending from Adrastus.
  16. ^ Homer, Iliad 5.410–415; compare with Apollodorus, 1.8.6.
  17. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 33. Grimal, s.v. Adrastus, has Hippodamia being Adrastus' daughter, however according Diodorus Siculus, 4.70.3, Hippodamia was the daughter of Butes (the only father of Hippodamia noted by Parada, s.v. Hippodamia 4), while according to Ovid, Heroides 17.247–248, her father was one "Atrax".
  18. ^ Homer, Iliad 2.572, see also Pindar, Nemean, 9.11; Herodotus, 5.67; Statius, Thebaid 2.179, 4.49; Pausanias, 2.6.6.
  19. ^ For a discussion of the sources for Adrastus' dispute with Amphiaraus, see Gantz, pp. 506–508. For a discussion of the dynastic history of the Argolid, see also Hard, pp. 332–335.
  20. ^ Gantz, p. 507; Race 1997a, pp. 96–97; Tripp, s.v. Adrastus (1); Pindar, Nemean, 9.8–14. According to Herodotus, 5.67, the Sicyonian games were founded by Cleisthenes of Sicyon. See also Pausanias, 2.6.6, which has Adrastus fleeing to Polybus at Sicyon, and becoming king when Polybus died.
  21. ^ Gantz, pp. 507–508.
  22. ^ Gantz, p. 507; Schol. Pindar Nemean 9.30 [= Menaichmos of Sikyon FGrHist 131 F 10]. Compare Herodotus, 5.67, which says that Adrastus' maternal grandfather Polybus died without an heir, and bequeathed the kingship to Adrastus.
  23. ^ Gantz, pp. 507–508; Thebaid fr. 7* West, pp. 48, 49 [= Schol. Pindar Nemean 9.30b].
  24. ^ Pindar, Nemean, 9.13–17.
  25. ^ Homer, Iliad 23.346–7; Antimachus (apud Pausanias, 8.25.9); Statius, Thebaid 6.314; Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica 4.569–573.
  26. ^ Hard, p. 101; Apollodorus, 3.6.8; Pausanias, 8.25.5, 8.25.7.
  27. ^ Schol. (D) Iliad 23.346 (see Thebaid fr. 11 West, pp. 52–55); Pausanias 8.25.10. Compare with Statius, Thebaid 6.311–314 and Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica 4.569–573, which say that Arion was given to Adrastus by the gods.
  28. ^ Hard, p. 102, p. 321; Gantz, p. 517; Thebaid fr. 11 West, pp. 52–55; Apollodorus, 3.6.8; Strabo, 9.2.11; Pausanias, 8.25.8; Pancrates of Alexandria (Page, pp. 518, 519); compare with Euripides, Hypsipyle fr. 757.116–118; Greek Anthology 7.431.
  29. ^ Grimal, s.v. Adrastus; Tyrtaeus, fr. 12.8; Plato, Phaedrus 269a [= Thebaid fr. 4* West, pp. 46, 47].
  30. ^ For discussions of the quarrel between Polynices and Eteocles, see Gantz, pp. 502–506; Hard, pp. 315–317.
  31. ^ Hard, pp. 315–317; Gantz, pp. 508–510; Tripp, s.v. Seven against Thebes A; Euripides, The Suppliants 131–154, The Phoenician Women 408–429; Hypsipyle, fr. 753c; Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.1–3; Hyginus, Fabulae 69; Statius, Thebaid 1.390–512, 2.152–205; Apollodorus, 3.6.1, with Polynices and Tydeus wearing the pelts of a lion and boar in Hyginus and Statius, and with a lion and a boar on their shields in Apollodorus. The daughters, unnamed in Euripides, are named in Diodorus, Hyginus, Statius, and Apollodorus.
  32. ^ Hard, pp. 317–318; Gantz, pp. 508, 510; Tripp, s.v. Seven against Thebes B; Pindar, Nemean, 9.13–17; Sophocles, fr. 187 Lloyd-Jones; Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.5–6; Apollodorus, 3.6.2.
  33. ^ Hard, p. 318; Gantz, pp. 510–512; Tripp, s.vv. Adrastus (1), Opheltes, Seven against Thebes C; Pindar, Nemean 8.50–51, 10.26–28 with Races' note 13; Bacchylides, 9.10–24; Apollodorus, 3.6.4. For the horse race see also Propertius, Elegies 2.37–38; Statius, Thebaid 6.301–530 (which has Arion being driven by Adrastus' son-in law Polynices, finishing first, but pulling an empty chariot, Polynices having been thrown off along the way). Compare with Callimachus, fr. 223 Trypanis and Whitman pp. 154, 155.
  34. ^ Hard, p. 321; Gantz, p. 517; Thebaid fr. 11 West, pp. 52–55; Apollodorus, 3.6.8; Strabo, 9.2.11; Pausanias, 8.25.8; Pancrates of Alexandria (Page, pp. 518, 519).
  35. ^ Hard, pp. 321–322; Gantz, pp. 296–297, 519–522; Tripp, s.v. Seven against Thebes E; Oldfather's note 16 to Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.9; Frazer, pp. 519–520; Apollodorus, 3.7.1, with Frazer's note 2; Aeschylus, Eleusinians (Sommerstein 2009b, pp. 56–57}; Euripides, Suppliants (Kovacs 1998, pp. 4–6); Plutarch, Theseus 29.4–5. Herodotus, 9.27, says that, during the Battle of Plataea (479 BC), the Athenians cited the burial as one of the great achievements of Athens; compare with Lysias, Funeral Oration 7–10; Isocrates Panegyricus 54. Pausanias, 1.39.2, reports seeing the tombs of the Seven on the road leading out of Eleusis.
  36. ^ For a discussion of the identities of the seven champions see Gantz, pp. 514–517.
  37. ^ Gantz, pp. 515–516; Aeschylus, Seven Against Thebes 375ff..
  38. ^ Gantz, p. 515; Euripides, The Suppliants 857–931; Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus 1301–1325.
  39. ^ Gantz, p. 516; Euripides, The Phoenician Women 1104–1138; Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.7; Apollodorus, 3.6.3, 3.6.6; Hyginus, Fabulae 70; Statius, Thebaid 4.32–250.
  40. ^ Hard, pp. 325–326; Tripp, s.v. Adrastus (1); Pindar, Pythian 8.39–55; Apollodorus, 3.7.2–3 (which says the second war came ten tears after the first, but does not mention Adrastus); Pausanias, 1.43.1, 9.9.2. For a discussion of the Epigoni, see Gantz, pp. 522–525.
  41. ^ Hard, p. 326; Gantz, p. 522; Pindar, Pythian 8.39–55.
  42. ^ Tripp, s.v. Adrastus (1); Hyginus, Fabulae, 71, which says that Aegialeus was the only one of the Epigoni to die "because his father had survived, he gave up his life for his father's". However Pausanias, 9.19.2, implies a tradition in which other of the Epigoni also died, see Gantz, p. 524.
  43. ^ Hard, p. 327; Pausanias, 1.43.1.
  44. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Adrastus; Tripp, s.v. Adrastus (1); Hyginus, Fabulae 242.
  45. ^ Homer, Iliad 2.572.
  46. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.121.
  47. ^ Homer, Iliad 5.410–415.
  48. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.121.
  49. ^ Campbell, pp. 137–141.
  50. ^ Gantz, pp. 508–509; fr. 222A Campbell [= P. Lille 76 + 73], lines 270-280.
  51. ^ West, p. 7.
  52. ^ Gantz, p. 502; Pausanias, 9.9.5. For a discussion of the Thebaid and the surviving fragments see West, pp. 6–9, 43–53.
  53. ^ Thebaid fr. 11 West, pp. 52, 55; Gantz, p. 517.
  54. ^ Thebaid fr. 6 West, pp. 48, 49; Gantz, p. 510. For other possible mentions of Adrastus in the poem, see Thebaid frs. 4*, 7* West, pp. 46–49.
  55. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary, s.v. Adrastus.
  56. ^ Race, pp. 96–103; Pindar, Nemean 9.8–27.
  57. ^ Pindar, Nemean 9.8–12.
  58. ^ Pindar, Nemean 9.13–14.
  59. ^ Pindar, Nemean 9.15–17.
  60. ^ Pindar, Nemean 9.18–27.
  61. ^ Pindar, Nemean 8.50–51, 10.26–28 with Race's note 13. See also Bacchylides, 9.10–24; Apollodorus, 3.6.4.
  62. ^ Pindar, Olympian 6.16–17.
  63. ^ Pindar, Phythian 8.48–55.
  64. ^ Gantz, pp. 296, 522. For a discussion of the play see Kovacs 1998, pp. 3–11. Adrastus was also probably a character in Aeschylus' lost plays Elusinians, Women of Argos, and Epigoni, and possibly in Nemea, see Sommerstein 2009b, pp. 10–11, 56–59, 154–155.
  65. ^ Gantz, p. 509.
  66. ^ Euripides, The Suppliants 131–154. A similar is account is given by Euripides, The Phoenician Women 408–429.
  67. ^ Euripides, The Suppliants 155–161.
  68. ^ Gantz, p. 516; Euripides, The Suppliants 857–917.
  69. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.1–3.
  70. ^ Gantz, p. 513; Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.4.
  71. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.5–6.
  72. ^ Gantz, p. 516; Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.7.
  73. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.65.8–9.
  74. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 68–74.
  75. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 69, 70. For Adrastus as the son of Talaus, see Bacchylides, 9.19; Pindar, Nemean 9.14, Olympian 6.15; and Euripides, The Phoenician Women 422. Compare with Apollodorus, 1.9.13, where his mother is Lysimache, the daughter of Abas; and Pausanias, 2.6.6, where his mother is Lysianassa, the daughter of Polybus.
  76. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 69.1–5. The story is told in Euripides, The Suppliants 131–154, The Phoenician Women 408–423, however, Euripides makes no mention of Polynices and Tydeus wearing animal hides, he says only that Adrastus identified the two as the husbands referred to by the oracle because they fought like wild beasts.
  77. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 69.5.
  78. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 69.6–7.
  79. ^ Bravo, pp. 117–118; Gantz, p. 511; Hyginus, Fabulae 74.
  80. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 70.
  81. ^ So also was the fifth-fourth-century BC Thebaid of Antimachus.
  82. ^ Statius, Thebaid 1.138–139.
  83. ^ Statius, Thebaid 1.164–165.
  84. ^ Statius, Thebaid 1.390–399.
  85. ^ Statius, Thebaid 1.400–512.
  86. ^ Statius, Thebaid 1.514–720.
  87. ^ Statius, Thebaid 2.152–200.
  88. ^ Statius, Thebaid 2.363–451.
  89. ^ Statius, Thebaid 2.482–743.
  90. ^ Statius, Thebaid 3.324–386.
  91. ^ Statius, Thebaid 3.386–388.
  92. ^ Statius, Thebaid 3.388–393.
  93. ^ Statius, Thebaid 3.440–597.
  94. ^ Statius, Thebaid 3.618–677.
  95. ^ Statius, Thebaid 3.678–721.
  96. ^ Statius, Thebaid 4.38–73.
  97. ^ Statius, Thebaid 4.646–745.
  98. ^ Statius, Thebaid 4.646–850.
  99. ^ Statius, Thebaid 5.499–661.
  100. ^ Statius, Thebaid 5.662–671.
  101. ^ Statius, Thebaid 5.691–703.
  102. ^ Statius, Thebaid 6.249–923.
  103. ^ Statius, Thebaid 6.924–946.
  104. ^ Statius, Thebaid 11.424–429.
  105. ^ Statius, Thebaid 11.429–435.
  106. ^ Statius, Thebaid 11.435–441.
  107. ^ Statius, Thebaid 11.441–446.
  108. ^ Apollodorus, 1.9.13.
  109. ^ Apollodorus, 3.6.1.
  110. ^ Apollodorus, 3.6.2.
  111. ^ Apollodorus, 3.6.3.
  112. ^ Apollodorus, 3.6.7–8.
  113. ^ Apollodorus, 3.7.1.
  114. ^ For a discussion of the hero cult of Adrastus, see Farnell, pp. 334–336.
  115. ^ Herodotus, 5.67.
  116. ^ Hard, p. 327; Pausanias, 1.43.1.
  117. ^ Pausanias, 1.30.4.
  118. ^ Gantz, p. 509.
  119. ^ Gantz, pp. 511–512; Pausanias, 3.18.12. The scene might refer either to the Seven setting out from Argos, or to their stop in Nemea
  120. ^ Gantz, p. 511.
  121. ^ Gantz, p. 512.
  122. ^ Gantz, p. 515.
  123. ^ Gantz, p. 516; Pausanias, 10.10.3.
  124. ^ Virgil, Aeneid 6.480.
  125. ^ A Latin Dictionary, s.v. Adrastus; Servius, Commentary on the Aeneid of Vergil 6.480 Adrasti pallentis imago.
  126. ^ E.g. Ammianus Marcellinus, History 14.11.22, with n. 2.

References Edit

adrastus, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, mythology, adrestus, ancient, greek, Ἄδραστος, Ἄδρηστος, perhaps, meaning, inescapable, king, argos, leader, seven, against, thebes, argive, king, talaus, forced, argos, dynastic, rival, amphiaraus, fled, sicyon, w. For other uses see Adrastus disambiguation In Greek mythology Adrastus or Adrestus Ancient Greek Ἄdrastos or Ἄdrhstos 1 perhaps meaning the inescapable 2 was a king of Argos and leader of the Seven against Thebes He was the son of the Argive king Talaus but was forced out of Argos by his dynastic rival Amphiaraus He fled to Sicyon where he became king Later he reconciled with Amphiaraus and returned to Argos as its king Because of an oracle Adrastus married his daughters to the exiles Polynices and Tydeus and promised to restore them to their homelands He first assembled an army to place Polynices on the throne of Thebes led by seven champions famously called the Seven against Thebes The expedition failed and all the champions died except Adrastus saved by his divine horse Arion He went with the Epigoni the sons of the Seven in the successful second war against Thebes and was said to have died on his way home Adrastus is mentioned as early as Homer s Iliad and his story was presumably told in the Cyclic Thebaid He figures prominently in the poetry of Pindar and is a main character in Euripides The Suppliants His story was told by Diodorus Siculus Hyginus Statius and Apollodorus He was said to be the founder of the Nemean Games had hero cults at Sicyon Megara and Colonus and was depicted in works of art from as early as the 6th century BC 3 Contents 1 Family 2 Mythology 2 1 Seven against Thebes 2 2 One of the Seven 2 3 Second war against Thebes 2 4 Death 3 Principal sources 3 1 The Iliad Stesichorus and the Thebaid 3 2 Pindar 3 3 The Suppliants 3 4 Late sources 3 4 1 Diodorus Siculus 3 4 2 Hyginus 3 4 3 Statius 3 4 4 Apollodorus 4 Hero cult 5 Iconography 6 Pallor of Adrastus 7 Notes 8 ReferencesFamily EditHomer s Illiad mentions Adrastus but without giving any ancestry 4 The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women without mentioning Adrastus has Talaus as the son of Bias and Pero 5 and from the lyric poets Bacchylides and Pindar we first hear that Adrastus was the son of Talaus who according to Apollonius of Rhodes was an Argonaut 6 No early sources say who Adrastus mother was however late sources give three different names 7 Lysimache the daughter of Abas 8 Lysianassa the daughter of Polybus 9 or Eurynome 10 The Iliad mentions a daughter of Adrastus Aegiale 11 and the logographer Hellanicus of Lesbos mentions a son Aegialeus 12 The mythographer Apollodorus gives the following genealogy Adrastus father was Talus who was the son of Bias and Pero His mother was Lysimache the daughter of Abas son of Melampus He had four younger brothers Parthenopaeus Pronax Mecisteus and Aristomachus and a sister Eriphyle Adrastus married Amphithea the daughter of his brother Pronax by whom he had three daughters Argia Deipyle and Aegiale and two sons Aegialeus and Cyanippus 13 Adrastus daughters had several notable husbands and sons Argia married Polynices the son of the Thebean king Oedipus and Deipyle married Tydeus the son of the Calydonian king Oeneus 14 According to Hyginus Diomedes who fought in the Trojan War was the son of Deipyle and Tydeus and Thersander one of the Epigoni was the son of Argia and Polynices 15 In the Iliad another of Adrastus daughters Aegiale is the wife of Diomedes 16 Hyginus also says that Hippodamia the wife of King Pirithous of the Lapiths was the daughter of an Adrastus possibly referring to this Adrastus 17 Mythology EditThe Iliad refers to Adrastus as king of Sicyon 18 but does not explain how a son of the Argive king Talaus came to rule Sicyon However later sources tell of a dispute of some sort between the descendants of Bias and his brother Melampus two of the most powerful families in the Argolid involving Adrastus the grandson of Bias and Amphiaraus the son of Oicles a grandson of Melampus 19 According to Pindar at one time the sons of Talaus ruled Argos but were overpowered by discord and Adrastus fled Argos and went to Sicyon to escape Amphiaraus and that during his reign there he founded the Sicyonian games 20 Pindar does not say what circumstances caused Adrastus to flee from Argos to Sicyon or how he became its king but later sources do 21 According to one version after Adrastus brother Pronax who was king of Argos died Adrastus fled to Sicyon where his mother s father Polybus was king and eventually inherited the Sicyonian throne 22 While according to another Adrastus fled to Sicyon after Amphiaraus killed Talaus and got the throne by marrying Polybus daughter 23 In any case Adrastus became king of Sicyon Then according to Pindar Adrastus and his brothers were able to effect a reconciliation with Amphiaraus by giving him their sister Eriphyle in marriage and Adrastus was able to return to Argos and assume the Argive throne 24 Adrastus was the owner of the fabulously fast horse Arion 25 who was the offspring of Posidon and Demeter when they mated in horse form 26 Adrastus was given Arion by Heracles 27 and the horse saved Adrastus life during the war of the Seven against Thebes when all the other champions of the expedition were killed 28 Adrastus seems to have had a reputation as a skillful speaker 29 Seven against Thebes Edit Main article Seven against Thebes The war of the Seven against Thebes resulted from a quarrel between Oedipus sons Polynices and Eteocles over the kingship of Thebes which left Eteocles on the throne and Polynices in exile 30 One night Polynices arrived at Adrastus palace seeking shelter He found a place to sleep but soon after Tydeus the exiled son of the Calydonian king Oeneus also arrived seeking shelter and the two began to fight over the same space When Adrastus discovered Polynices and Tydeus fighting like wild beasts or in later accounts when he saw that Polynices wore the hyde of a lion and that Tydeus wore the Hyde of a Boar or that they had those animals on their shields he remembered an oracle of Apollo that said he should marry his daughters to a lion and a boar So Adrastus gave his daughters Argia to Polynices and Deipyle to Tydeus and promised to restore them to their kingdoms beginning with Polynices 31 Adrastus proceeded to assemble a large Argive army to attack Thebes appointing seven champions to be its leaders These became known as the Seven against Thebes One of those chosen the seer Amphiaraus had foreseen that the expedition was doomed to fail and that all of the champions but Adrastus would die and so refused to join But when Polynices bribed Amphiaraus wife Eriphyle to tell her husband to join the expedition he was forced to obey because of a promise Amphiaraus had made to allow his wife who was also Adrastus sister to settle any disputes between the two men 32 Adrastus and his army were forced to stop for water at Nemea where they became involved in the death of the child hero Opheltes There Adrastus held funeral games in Opheltes honor in which he won the horse race with his horse Arion These games were said to have been the origin of the Nemean Games 33 As the seer Amphiaraus had foretold the expedition ended in disaster at Thebes All of the champions perished except for Adrastus who was saved by the speed of his divine horse Arion 34 According to accounts first occurring in fifth century BC Greek tragedy after the failed assault on Thebes Creon who with the death of Etecles became the new ruler of Thebes forbade the burial of the expeditions dead Athenian tradition held that Theseus the king and founder hero of Athens assisted Adrastus in recovering the bodies of his fallen comrades 35 One of the Seven Edit Prior to the fifth century BC the number and names of the seven champions is uncertain 36 The first certain reference to the number of champions being seven along with a list of their names occurs in Aeschylus Seven Against Thebes Adrastus although present at the battle is not considered by Aeschylus to be one of the Seven 37 The same list of names is given in Euripides The Suppliants and Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus 38 However Euripides gives a slightly different list in The Phoenician Women with Adrastus instead of Eteoclus as one of the Seven and this list will be followed by the Greek historian Diodorus Siculus the mythographers Apollodorus and Hyginus and the Latin poet Statius 39 In The Phoenician Women and Apollodorus as in the Seven Against Thebes each of the Seven is assigned to one of the seven gates of Thebes with Adrastus being assigned the Seventh gate in The Phoenician Women and the Homoloidian gate in Apollodorus Second war against Thebes Edit Main article Epigoni Ten years after the failed expedition against Thebes to avenge their father s deaths the sons of the fallen Seven who were called the Epigoni Afterborn marched again on Thebes Adrastus accompanied them on this second Theban expedition called the war of the Epigoni 40 This time according to Pindar the omens foretold success for the expedition but death for Adrastus son Aegialeus 41 According to Hyginus as Adrastus was the only one of the Seven to survive the first expedition his son Aegialeus was the only one of the Epigoni to die in the second 42 Death Edit According to Pausanias the Megarians said that Adrastus leading the Argive army home after taking Thebes died at Megara of old age and grief for the death of his son and was honored there 43 However Hyginus says that in accordance with an oracle of Apollo Adrastus and his son Hipponous killed themselves by throwing themselves into a fire 44 Principal sources EditThe Iliad Stesichorus and the Thebaid Edit There are only a few surviving references to Adrastus before the 5th century BC The Iliad has four passing mentions of Adrastus It describes him as being at the first the king of Sicyon 45 and his swift horse Arion being of heavenly stock 46 It mentions his daughter Aegiale being the wife of Diomedes 47 and another daughter of his marrying Tydeus 48 The lyric poet Stesichorus c 630 555 BC apparently wrote a poem now lost about the war against Thebes 49 in which Adrastus would presumably have figured A fragment from the poem mentions Adrastus giving a daughter to Polynices 50 The Cyclic Thebaid early sixth century BC 51 was a Greek epic poem whose entire subject was the Seven s Theban war however only a few fragments have survived 52 One fragment has Adrastus being the only one saved at Thebes thanks to his horse Arion 53 Another fragment has Adrastus lamenting the death of Amphiaraus 54 Much of the later tradition concerning Adrastus probably derives from this work 55 Pindar Edit The 5th century lyric poet Pindar mentions Adrastus in several of his poems He devotes twenty lines of his Nemian 9 to Adrastus and the expedition of the Seven against Thebes 56 He begins by praising Adrastus as the founder of the Sicyonian games which Pindar says Adrastus did during his reign as king of Sicyon Let us rouse up then the resounding lyre and rouse the pipe for the very apex of contests for horses which Adrastus established for Phoebus by the streams of Asopus Having mentioned them I shall exalt the hero with fame bringing honors who reigning there Sicyon at that time made the city famous by glorifying it with new festivals and contests for men s strength and with polished chariots 57 He then tells of a dispute between Adrastus and the seer Amphiaraus which resulted in Adrastus and his brothers being overthrown and Adrastus fleeing Argos For in time past to escape bold counseling Amphiaraus and terrible civil strife he had fled from his ancestral home and Argos No longer were Talaus Adrastus father sons rulers they had been overpowered by discord 58 And how Ardastus and Amphiaraus were reconciled by Adrastus giving his sister Eriphyle to Ampiaraus But the stronger man puts an end to a former dispute After giving man subduing Eriphyle as a faithful pledge to Oecles son Amphiaraus for a wife they became the greatest of the fair haired Danaans 59 After which Adrastus was a leader of the disastrous ill omened expedition of the Seven against Thebes and later they led an army of men to seven gated Thebes on a journey with no favorable omens and Cronus son brandished his lightning and urged them not to set out recklessly from home but to forgo the expedition But after all the host was eager to march with bronze weapons and cavalry gear into obvious disaster and on the banks of the Ismenus they laid down their sweet homecoming and fed the white flowering smoke with their bodies for seven pyres feasted on the men s young limbs But for Amphiaraus sake Zeus split the deep bosomed earth with his almighty thunderbolt and buried him with his team before being struck in the back by Periclymenus spear and suffering disgrace in his warrior spirit 60 Pindar attributes the founding of the Nemean Games to Adrastus 61 And after the death of Amphiaraus Pindar has Adrastus say I dearly miss the eye of my army good both as a seer and at fighting with the spear 62 In Pythian 8 Pindar mentions Ardastus receiving a prophecy from the dead Amphiaraus during the battle of the Epigoni at Thebes 63 he who suffered in a former defeat the hero Adrastus is now met with news of better omen but in his own household he will fare otherwise for he alone from the Danaan army will gather the bones of his dead son and with the favor of the gods will come with his host unharmedThe Suppliants Edit Adrastus is a principal character in Euripides tragedy The Suppliants c 420 BC 64 The action of the play takes place after the disastrous defeat of the Seven against Thebes and the refusal of Creon the new Theban king to allow the burial of the expedition s dead Adrastus has come to Eleusis seeking the Athenians help in recovering the bodies of the fallen warriors In the play we hear for the first time an account of why Adrastus made war on Thebes 65 In an initial interview Adrastus tells Theseus the king of Athens that because of an oracle of Apollo he had given his daughters unnamed to Polynices and Theseus and that because of the crime done to Polynices by his brother Eteocles who had stolen his property i e the Theban throne Adrastus marched seven companies against Thebes 66 Theseus then asks Adrastus whether he consulted seers and the gods before making war on Thebes and Adrastus answers that not only did he go to war without the gods good will he also went against the wish of Amphiaraus 67 Finally persuaded to help recover the dead Theseus leads an Athenian army to Thebes where he defeats the Thebans in battle and brings back the dead warriors to Eleusis Adrastus then in a long speech of 60 lines eulogizes the fallen champions 68 Late sources Edit The Greek historian Diodorus Siculus first century BC the Roman mythographer Hyginus c 64 BC AD 17 the Latin poet Statius c 45 c 96 and the Greek mythographer Apollodorus first or second century AD all gave accounts of Adrastus story Diodorus Siculus Edit According to Diodorus Siculus Polynices fled Thebes when Eteocles refused to give up the kingship as had been agreed and Tydeus fled Calydon after killing his cousins The two princes came to Argos where Adrastus received both the fugitives kindly As in Euripides because of an oracle Adrastus married his daughters Argia to Polynices and Deipyle to Tydeus and promised to restore the exiles to their native kingdoms 69 Adrastus decided to deal with Thebes first So he sent his son in law Tydeus on an embassy to negotiate a peaceful return for Polynices Upon learning of the failure of Tydeus mission Adrastus began organizing an expedition against Thebes 70 The seer Amphiaraus refused to take part at first because he knew if he did he would die But Polynices gave Amphiaraus s wife Eriphyle the necklace of Harmonia so that she would persuade her husband to join the expedition Diodorus reports that at the time Adrastus and Amphiaraus were at variance striving for the kingship and they agreed that Eriphyle Adrastus sister and Amphiaraus s wife would settle the matter And when Eriphyle awarded the victory to Adrastus saying that the expedition should be undertaken Amphiaraus agreed to go 71 Adrastus recruited Capaneus Hippomedon and Parthenopaeus the son of Atalanta to join himself Polynices Tydeus and Amphiaraus as the seven leaders of the notable army the same list of Seven as in Euripides The Phoenician Women 72 Omitting any mention of the Seven s stop at Nemea Diodorus next gives an account of the battle at Thebes As always all of the Seven died except Adrastus As for the burial of the Seven Diodorus with no mention of Creon or Theseus says that the Thebans refused to allow Adrastus to remove the dead so he went home to Argos and as in Euripides The Suppliants the Athenians recovered the bodies and buried them 73 Hyginus Edit In his Fabulae Hyginus gives an account of Adrastus story mostly in accord with earlier sources 74 Following Bacchylides Pindar and Euripides Hyginus says that Adrastus was the son of Talaus however Hyginus provides the name of a mother Eurynome 75 Following Euripides Hyginus says that Adrastus had received an oracle of Apollo which said he would marry his daughters to a lion and a boar and that when Polynices wearing the hide of a lion and Tydeus wearing the hide of a boar arrived at Adrastus court Adrastus remembered the oracle and so married his older daughter Argia to Polynices and his younger daughter Deipyle to Tydeus 76 He adds that Thersander one of the Epigoni was the son of Argia and Polynices and that Diomedes who fought at Troy and another of the Epigoni was the son of Deipyle and Tydeus 77 At Polynices request Adrastus assembled an army to take back the kingship of Thebes from Eteocles Adrastus chose seven generals including himself for the army because the walls of Thebes had seven gates 78 The army stops at Nemea in search of water Opheltes is killed by a snake Adrastus and the Seven kill the snake and establish funeral games in the child s honor 79 At Thebes all of the Seven die except Adrastus 80 Statius Edit Just as the Cyclic Thebaid had been the Latin poet Statius s Thebaid c 92 AD is devoted entirely to the Seven against Thebes 81 An epic poem in 12 books it gives the most detailed account of Adrastus story In Book 1 the situations at Thebes and Argos are described In Thebes Polynices and Eteocles having agreed to rule in alternate years 82 Eteocles occupies the throne while Polynices is in exile for a year 83 While in Argos There king Adrastus governed his people in tranquillity verging from life s midway into old age Rich was he in ancestry back to Jove on either side The better sex he lacked but flourished in female offspring supported by twin pledge of daughters To him Phoebus prophesied a deadly prodigy to tell but the truth of it was soon revealed that husbands for them were on their way by fate s leading a bristly pig and a tawny lion That pondering neither the father himself nor Amphiaraus skilled in futurity sees light for Apollo the source forbids Only in the parental heart anxiety sits and festers 84 One night during a raging storm Polynices and Tydeus also an exile separately arrive at Adrastus palace in Argos seeking refuge They quarrel over the same bit of shelter a fight breaks out Adrastus is awoken and separates them He invites the two inside and notices that Polynices wears a lion s pelt and that Tydeus a boar s skin and tusks and by these signs Adrastus recognizes in Polynices and Tydeus the husbands that had been prophesied for his two daughters 85 Adrastus feasts the young princes and introduces them to his daughters 86 The next day in Book 2 Polynices and Tydeus accept Adrastus offer of his daughters Argia and Deipyle in marriage and Adrastus promises to help the two exiles regain their native kingdoms 87 Adrastus sends Tydeus to Thebes to see if Eteocles will peacefully surrender his crown At Thebes Eteocles rejects Tydeus arguments that since his year of rule is over he should give over the kingship to Polynices 88 On his way back to Argos Tydeus is ambushed by fifty Thebans and kills all of these but Maeon 89 In Book 3 on returning to Argos the wounded Tydeus urges an immediate attack of Thebes an action the angry crowd supports 90 But addressing Polynices Adrastus deep of counsel and no novice in manipulating the weight of command urges restraint 91 Leave all this I pray you to the High Ones and my care for remedy Neither shall your brother wield the sceptre and you fail of satisfaction nor yet are we eager to let war loose But now all welcome Oeneus noble son triumphing in so great a bloodshed Let rest at last relax his courageous spirit For my part indignation shall not go short of reason 92 Adrastus consults the seers Amphiaraus and Melampus who receive omens too terrifying to divulge Meanwhile the Argives eagerly arm themselves and at the sad kings door demand war 93 Amphiaraus is finally forced to reveal what he has foreseen death and defeat at Thebes but the Argives are undeterred 94 Argia now Polynices wife tearfully urges her father Adrastus to make war on Thebes who begins assembling an army 95 In Book 4 the expedition sets out from Argos with Adrastus leading the first of the seven contingents King Adrastus sad and sick with weight of cares and nearer to departing years walks scarce of his own accord amid words of good cheer content with the steel that girds his side soldiers bear his shield behind him His driver grooms the swift horses right at the gate and Arion is already fighting the yoke This band three thousand strong follows Adrastus exulting He himself joins them venerable alike in years and sceptre like a bull moving tall among the pastures he has long possessed his neck is slack now and his shoulders empty but still he is the leader the steers have no stomach to attempt him in battle for they see his horns broken from many a blow and the massive nodules of breast wounds 96 In desperate need of water the expedition is forced to stop at Nemea 97 There they encounter Hypsipyle the nurse of the infant Opheltes and Adrastus urgently asks her to lead them to water which she does 98 Meanwhile in Book 5 the unattended Opheltes is killed by a serpent and the infant s father the king holding Hypsipyle responsible intends to kill her with his sword 99 The Archive champions rush to defend Hypsipyle their army s savior and Nemeans rally to their king but Adrastus and Amphiaraus intercede preventing an armed clash 100 A rumor of Hypsipyle s imminent death reaches the Archive army and they attack the palace but Adrastus is able to stop them by racing to the palace with Hypsipyle in his chariot to show his army that she is safe 101 In Book 6 Adrastus presides over games held in honor of Opheltes 102 As a final honor Adrastus is asked to give a display of his prowess with the bow or spear He gladly complies choosing a tree a great distance away as a target Adrastus shoots an arrow which hits the tree but bounces all the way back to his feet An ill omen the shaft promised its master a war from which he alone would return a sad homecoming 103 In Book 7 the expedition arrives at Thebes and the fighting begins and continues through Book 11 One by one each of the Seven champions die all except Polynices and Adrastus The brothers Polynices and Eteocles having agreed to fight in single combat to decide the war Adrastus drives his chariot between them and tries to stop them 104 Sons of Inachus and Tyrians shall we then watch this wickedness Where is right and the gods where war Persist not in your passion I pray you desist my enemy though did this anger permit you too are not far from me in blood you my son in law I also command If you so much desire a sceptre I put off my royal raiment go have Lerna and Argos to yourself 105 But when Polynices and Eteocles refuse to stop Adrastus flees 106 leaving it all behind camp men son in law Thebes and drives Arion on as he turns in the yoke and warns of Fate 107 Apollodorus Edit Apollodorus also gives an account of Adrastus story Apollodorus gives the following genealogy Bias and Pero had a son Talaus who married Lysimache daughter of Abas son of Melampus and had by her Adrastus Parthenopaeus Pronax Mecisteus Aristomachus and Eriphyle whom Amphiaraus married Parthenopaeus had a son Promachus who marched with the Epigoni against Thebes and Mecisteus had a son Euryalus who went to Troy Pronax had a son Lycurgus and Adrastus had by Amphithea daughter of Pronax three daughters Argia Deipyle and Aegialia and two sons Aegialeus and Cyanippus 108 According to Apollodorus Polynices being banished from Thebes by Eteocles came to Argos one night and fought with Tydeus They were heard by Adrastus who separated them Adrastus noticing their shields one with a lion and the other a boar remembered an oracle which told him that he should marry his daughters to a boar and a lion and married his daughters Argia and Deipyle to the two young men Adrastus promised to restore both his son in laws to their kingdoms and eager to march against Thebes first began to assembled an army 109 The seer Amphiaraus having foreseen that all except Adrastus who went to Thebes were destined to die at first refused to join Adrastus expedition But as part of the resolution of an old dispute between Adrastus and Amphiaraus Adrastus sister Eriphyle had married Amphiaraus and Amphiaraus had promised to let Eriphyle decide any future disputes between the two men So when Polynices bribed Amphiaraus wife Eriphyle to tell her husband to join the expedition he was forced to obey 110 In addition to himself his son in laws Polynices and Tydeus and his brother in law Amphiaraus Adrastus chose Capaneus Hippomedon who Apollodorus says according to some accounts was a brother of Adrastus and Parthenopaeus to be the seven leaders of the expedition against Thebes However as Apollodorus notes some do not count Polynices and Tydeus as being among the seven instead including Eteoclus son of Iphis and Mecisteus another brother of Adrastus in the list of the seven 111 At Thebes when Capaneus was killed by Zeus thunderbolt Adrastus and the rest of the Argive army fled but Adrastus alone was saved by his horse Arion 112 When Creon forbade the burial of the Argive dead Arastus having fled to Athens and took refuge at the altar of Mercy and laying on it the suppliant s bough he prayed that they would bury the dead and Theseus and the Athenians captured Thebes and recovered the dead 113 Hero cult EditAdrastus had hero cults at Sicyon Megara and Kolonos 114 According to Herodotus Adrastus had a hero shrine heroon in the marketplace at Sicyon and up until the reign of Cleisthenes of Sicyon c 600 560 BC was celebrated there with sacrifices and festivals and tragic choruses 115 Pausanias says that Adrastus was honored at Megara where presumably his tomb could be seen 116 Pausanias also mentions a hero shrine at Kolonos in Attica 117 Iconography EditAdrastus appears in vase painting as early as the late 6th century BC A Chalcidian calyx krater c 530 BC depicts the arrival scene of the exiled princes Polynices and Tydeus at Adrastus palace On the right Adrastus identified by inscription reclines on a couch with a woman his wife standing beside him They are both looking to the left where Tydeus also named and another man presumed to be Polynices are sitting on the ground with their mantles wrapped around them with two women conversing standing over them Adrastus daughters 118 Pausanias reports seeing Adrastus depicted on the Amyclae Throne of Apollo 6th century BC along with Tydeus stopping a fight between Amphiaraus and Lycurgus the son of Pronax 119 The same scene seems to have been depicted on a shield strap from Olympia B 1654 120 as well as on a fragment from a Laconian cup by the Hunt Painter 121 Adrastus appears on an Etruscan gem from the first half of the 5th century BC Berlin Ch GI 194 With Adrastus are four of the Seven champions Parthenopaeus Amphiaraus Polynices and Tydeus Adrastus and Tydeus are standing in arms with the rest seated 122 Pausanias also describes seeing a monument c 450s BC at Delphi which depicted the Seven and included Adrastus 123 Pallor of Adrastus EditA line in Virgil s Aeneid has Aeneas in the underworld encounter the pale shade of Adrastus Adrasti pallentis imago 124 Servius in his commentary says this was in reference to Adrastus turning pale at the sight of the deaths at Thebes 125 The pallor of Adrastus apparently became proverbial 126 Notes Edit Grimal s v Adrastus 1 Parada s v Adrastus 1 For Ἄdrhstos see Herodotus 5 67 Oxford Classical Dictionary s v Adrastus Oxford Classical Dictionary s v Adrastus Grimal s v Asrastus Tripp s v Adrastus 1 Brill s New Pauly s v Adrastus Parada s v Adrastus 1 Smith s v Adrastus 1 For a discussion of the early sources for Adrastus genealogy see Gantz pp 506 507 For genealogical tables containing Adrastus see Hard p 707 Table 14 and Grimal p 525 Table I Hesiod fr 35 Most fr 37 MW Bacchylides 9 19 Pindar Nemean 9 14 Olympian 6 15 see also Euripides The Phoenician Women 422 For Talaus as an Argonaut see Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica 2 110 111 Parada s v Adrastus 1 Apollodorus 1 9 13 Pausanias 2 6 6 Compare with Herodotus 5 67 and a scholion to Pindar Nemean 9 30 see Gantz p 507 where Adrastus maternal grandfather is said to be Polybus Hyginus Fabulae 69 70 Homer Iliad 5 410 415 compare with Apollodorus 1 8 6 Fowler 2013 p 414 Gantz p 524 Fowler 2000 p 191 Hellanicus fr 100 FGrHist 4 F 100 Apollodorus 1 9 13 According to Hyginus Fabulae 71 his wife was Demonassa and according to Fabulae 242 he had a son named Hipponous According to other accounts Adrastus married a daughter of Polybus the king of Sicyon see Gantz pp 507 508 For his daughters Argia and Deipyle see also Diodorus Siculus 4 65 3 Hyginus Fabulae 69 Statius Thebaid 2 203 204 Herodotus 5 68 also has Aegialeus as Adrastus son According to Apollodorus 1 8 6 some said that Aegiale was the daughter of Aegialeus while according to Pausanias 2 18 4 2 30 10 Cyanippus was the son of Aegialeus see Parada s vv Aegialeus 1 Cyanippus Hard p 316 Gantz pp 508 509 Homer Iliad 14 121 has Tydeus married to an unnamed daughter of Adrastus while Stesichorus fr 222A Campbell P Lille 76 73 lines 270 280 has the seer Tiresias tell Polynices that Adrastus will give him his daughter also unnamed Pherecydes fr 122a Fowler Fowler 2008 p 340 FGrHist 3 F 122 Apollodorus 1 8 5 and fr 122b Fowler Fowler 2008 pp 340 341 FGrHist 3 F 122 Schol A B 4 45 3 Dindorf D codd CHVLa Ge I 1 170 23 Nicole Il 14 119 name Deipyle as the daughter who married Tydeus Euripides see Hypsipyle fr 753c Oeneus fr 558 The Phoenician Women 419 423 The Suppliants 133 136 has unnamed daughters married to Polynices and Tydeus Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus 1302 has Polynices say that Adrastus was his father in law Diodorus Siculus 4 65 3 Hyginus Fabulae 69 Statius Thebaid 2 203 204Apollodorus 3 6 1 all have Argia marry Polynices and Deipyle marry Tydeus Hyginus Fabulae 69 71 compare with Homer Iliad 5 410 which has Diomedes as Tydeus son and 14 121 which says that Tydeus married a daughter of Adrastus Pindar Olympian 2 43 45 which has Polynices son Thersander descending from Adrastus Homer Iliad 5 410 415 compare with Apollodorus 1 8 6 Hyginus Fabulae 33 Grimal s v Adrastus has Hippodamia being Adrastus daughter however according Diodorus Siculus 4 70 3 Hippodamia was the daughter of Butes the only father of Hippodamia noted by Parada s v Hippodamia 4 while according to Ovid Heroides 17 247 248 her father was one Atrax Homer Iliad 2 572 see also Pindar Nemean 9 11 Herodotus 5 67 Statius Thebaid 2 179 4 49 Pausanias 2 6 6 For a discussion of the sources for Adrastus dispute with Amphiaraus see Gantz pp 506 508 For a discussion of the dynastic history of the Argolid see also Hard pp 332 335 Gantz p 507 Race 1997a pp 96 97 Tripp s v Adrastus 1 Pindar Nemean 9 8 14 According to Herodotus 5 67 the Sicyonian games were founded by Cleisthenes of Sicyon See also Pausanias 2 6 6 which has Adrastus fleeing to Polybus at Sicyon and becoming king when Polybus died Gantz pp 507 508 Gantz p 507 Schol Pindar Nemean 9 30 Menaichmos of Sikyon FGrHist 131 F 10 Compare Herodotus 5 67 which says that Adrastus maternal grandfather Polybus died without an heir and bequeathed the kingship to Adrastus Gantz pp 507 508 Thebaid fr 7 West pp 48 49 Schol Pindar Nemean 9 30b Pindar Nemean 9 13 17 Homer Iliad 23 346 7 Antimachus apud Pausanias 8 25 9 Statius Thebaid 6 314 Quintus Smyrnaeus Posthomerica 4 569 573 Hard p 101 Apollodorus 3 6 8 Pausanias 8 25 5 8 25 7 Schol D Iliad 23 346 see Thebaid fr 11 West pp 52 55 Pausanias 8 25 10 Compare with Statius Thebaid 6 311 314 and Quintus Smyrnaeus Posthomerica 4 569 573 which say that Arion was given to Adrastus by the gods Hard p 102 p 321 Gantz p 517 Thebaid fr 11 West pp 52 55 Apollodorus 3 6 8 Strabo 9 2 11 Pausanias 8 25 8 Pancrates of Alexandria Page pp 518 519 compare with Euripides Hypsipyle fr 757 116 118 Greek Anthology 7 431 Grimal s v Adrastus Tyrtaeus fr 12 8 Plato Phaedrus 269a Thebaid fr 4 West pp 46 47 For discussions of the quarrel between Polynices and Eteocles see Gantz pp 502 506 Hard pp 315 317 Hard pp 315 317 Gantz pp 508 510 Tripp s v Seven against Thebes A Euripides The Suppliants 131 154 The Phoenician Women 408 429 Hypsipyle fr 753c Diodorus Siculus 4 65 1 3 Hyginus Fabulae 69 Statius Thebaid 1 390 512 2 152 205 Apollodorus 3 6 1 with Polynices and Tydeus wearing the pelts of a lion and boar in Hyginus and Statius and with a lion and a boar on their shields in Apollodorus The daughters unnamed in Euripides are named in Diodorus Hyginus Statius and Apollodorus Hard pp 317 318 Gantz pp 508 510 Tripp s v Seven against Thebes B Pindar Nemean 9 13 17 Sophocles fr 187 Lloyd Jones Diodorus Siculus 4 65 5 6 Apollodorus 3 6 2 Hard p 318 Gantz pp 510 512 Tripp s vv Adrastus 1 Opheltes Seven against Thebes C Pindar Nemean 8 50 51 10 26 28 with Races note 13 Bacchylides 9 10 24 Apollodorus 3 6 4 For the horse race see also Propertius Elegies 2 37 38 Statius Thebaid 6 301 530 which has Arion being driven by Adrastus son in law Polynices finishing first but pulling an empty chariot Polynices having been thrown off along the way Compare with Callimachus fr 223 Trypanis and Whitman pp 154 155 Hard p 321 Gantz p 517 Thebaid fr 11 West pp 52 55 Apollodorus 3 6 8 Strabo 9 2 11 Pausanias 8 25 8 Pancrates of Alexandria Page pp 518 519 Hard pp 321 322 Gantz pp 296 297 519 522 Tripp s v Seven against Thebes E Oldfather s note 16 to Diodorus Siculus 4 65 9 Frazer pp 519 520 Apollodorus 3 7 1 with Frazer s note 2 Aeschylus Eleusinians Sommerstein 2009b pp 56 57 Euripides Suppliants Kovacs 1998 pp 4 6 Plutarch Theseus 29 4 5 Herodotus 9 27 says that during the Battle of Plataea 479 BC the Athenians cited the burial as one of the great achievements of Athens compare with Lysias Funeral Oration 7 10 Isocrates Panegyricus 54 Pausanias 1 39 2 reports seeing the tombs of the Seven on the road leading out of Eleusis For a discussion of the identities of the seven champions see Gantz pp 514 517 Gantz pp 515 516 Aeschylus Seven Against Thebes 375ff Gantz p 515 Euripides The Suppliants 857 931 Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus 1301 1325 Gantz p 516 Euripides The Phoenician Women 1104 1138 Diodorus Siculus 4 65 7 Apollodorus 3 6 3 3 6 6 Hyginus Fabulae 70 Statius Thebaid 4 32 250 Hard pp 325 326 Tripp s v Adrastus 1 Pindar Pythian 8 39 55 Apollodorus 3 7 2 3 which says the second war came ten tears after the first but does not mention Adrastus Pausanias 1 43 1 9 9 2 For a discussion of the Epigoni see Gantz pp 522 525 Hard p 326 Gantz p 522 Pindar Pythian 8 39 55 Tripp s v Adrastus 1 Hyginus Fabulae 71 which says that Aegialeus was the only one of the Epigoni to die because his father had survived he gave up his life for his father s However Pausanias 9 19 2 implies a tradition in which other of the Epigoni also died see Gantz p 524 Hard p 327 Pausanias 1 43 1 Oxford Classical Dictionary s v Adrastus Tripp s v Adrastus 1 Hyginus Fabulae 242 Homer Iliad 2 572 Homer Iliad 14 121 Homer Iliad 5 410 415 Homer Iliad 14 121 Campbell pp 137 141 Gantz pp 508 509 fr 222A Campbell P Lille 76 73 lines 270 280 West p 7 Gantz p 502 Pausanias 9 9 5 For a discussion of the Thebaid and the surviving fragments see West pp 6 9 43 53 Thebaid fr 11 West pp 52 55 Gantz p 517 Thebaid fr 6 West pp 48 49 Gantz p 510 For other possible mentions of Adrastus in the poem see Thebaid frs 4 7 West pp 46 49 Oxford Classical Dictionary s v Adrastus Race pp 96 103 Pindar Nemean 9 8 27 Pindar Nemean 9 8 12 Pindar Nemean 9 13 14 Pindar Nemean 9 15 17 Pindar Nemean 9 18 27 Pindar Nemean 8 50 51 10 26 28 with Race s note 13 See also Bacchylides 9 10 24 Apollodorus 3 6 4 Pindar Olympian 6 16 17 Pindar Phythian 8 48 55 Gantz pp 296 522 For a discussion of the play see Kovacs 1998 pp 3 11 Adrastus was also probably a character in Aeschylus lost plays Elusinians Women of Argos and Epigoni and possibly in Nemea see Sommerstein 2009b pp 10 11 56 59 154 155 Gantz p 509 Euripides The Suppliants 131 154 A similar is account is given by Euripides The Phoenician Women 408 429 Euripides The Suppliants 155 161 Gantz p 516 Euripides The Suppliants 857 917 Diodorus Siculus 4 65 1 3 Gantz p 513 Diodorus Siculus 4 65 4 Diodorus Siculus 4 65 5 6 Gantz p 516 Diodorus Siculus 4 65 7 Diodorus Siculus 4 65 8 9 Hyginus Fabulae 68 74 Hyginus Fabulae 69 70 For Adrastus as the son of Talaus see Bacchylides 9 19 Pindar Nemean 9 14 Olympian 6 15 and Euripides The Phoenician Women 422 Compare with Apollodorus 1 9 13 where his mother is Lysimache the daughter of Abas and Pausanias 2 6 6 where his mother is Lysianassa the daughter of Polybus Hyginus Fabulae 69 1 5 The story is told in Euripides The Suppliants 131 154 The Phoenician Women 408 423 however Euripides makes no mention of Polynices and Tydeus wearing animal hides he says only that Adrastus identified the two as the husbands referred to by the oracle because they fought like wild beasts Hyginus Fabulae 69 5 Hyginus Fabulae 69 6 7 Bravo pp 117 118 Gantz p 511 Hyginus Fabulae 74 Hyginus Fabulae 70 So also was the fifth fourth century BC Thebaid of Antimachus Statius Thebaid 1 138 139 Statius Thebaid 1 164 165 Statius Thebaid 1 390 399 Statius Thebaid 1 400 512 Statius Thebaid 1 514 720 Statius Thebaid 2 152 200 Statius Thebaid 2 363 451 Statius Thebaid 2 482 743 Statius Thebaid 3 324 386 Statius Thebaid 3 386 388 Statius Thebaid 3 388 393 Statius Thebaid 3 440 597 Statius Thebaid 3 618 677 Statius Thebaid 3 678 721 Statius Thebaid 4 38 73 Statius Thebaid 4 646 745 Statius Thebaid 4 646 850 Statius Thebaid 5 499 661 Statius Thebaid 5 662 671 Statius Thebaid 5 691 703 Statius Thebaid 6 249 923 Statius Thebaid 6 924 946 Statius Thebaid 11 424 429 Statius Thebaid 11 429 435 Statius Thebaid 11 435 441 Statius Thebaid 11 441 446 Apollodorus 1 9 13 Apollodorus 3 6 1 Apollodorus 3 6 2 Apollodorus 3 6 3 Apollodorus 3 6 7 8 Apollodorus 3 7 1 For a discussion of the hero cult of Adrastus see Farnell pp 334 336 Herodotus 5 67 Hard p 327 Pausanias 1 43 1 Pausanias 1 30 4 Gantz p 509 Gantz pp 511 512 Pausanias 3 18 12 The scene might refer either to the Seven setting out from Argos or to their stop in Nemea Gantz p 511 Gantz p 512 Gantz p 515 Gantz p 516 Pausanias 10 10 3 Virgil Aeneid 6 480 A Latin Dictionary s v Adrastus Servius Commentary on the Aeneid of Vergil 6 480 Adrasti pallentis imago E g Ammianus Marcellinus History 14 11 22 with n 2 References EditAmmianus Marcellinus History Volume I Books 14 19 Translated by J C Rolfe Loeb Classical Library No 300 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1950 ISBN 978 0 674 99331 0 Online version at Harvard University Press Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Apollodorus Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1921 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica edited and translated by William H Race Loeb Classical Library No 1 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 674 99630 4 Online version at Harvard University Press Collard Christopher and Martin Cropp Euripides Fragments Oedipus Chrysippus Other Fragments Loeb Classical Library No 506 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 674 99631 1 Online version at Harvard University Press Bacchylides Odes translated by Diane Arnson Svarlien 1991 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Bravo Jorge J III Excavations at Nemea IV The Shrine of Opheltes Univ of California Press 2018 ISBN 9780520967878 Brill s New Pauly Encyclopaedia of the Ancient World Volume 1 A ARI editors Hubert Cancik Helmuth Schneider Brill Publishers 2002 Callimachus Musaeus Aetia Iambi Hecale and Other Fragments Hero and Leander edited and translated by C A Trypanis T Gelzer Cedric H Whitman Loeb Classical Library No 421 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1973 Online version at Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99463 8 Diodorus Siculus Diodorus Siculus The Library of History Translated by C H Oldfather Twelve volumes Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1989 Online version by Bill Thayer Farnell Lewis Richard Hero Cults and Ideas of Immortality Oxford The Clarendon Press 1921 Internet Archive Fowler R L 2000 Early Greek Mythography Volume 1 Text and Introduction Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0198147404 Fowler R L 2013 Early Greek Mythography Volume 2 Commentary Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0198147411 Frazer J G Pausanias s Description of Greece Translated with a Commentary by J G Frazer Vol II Commentary on Book I Macmillan 1898 Internet Archive Internet Archive Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 The Greek Anthology Volume II Book 7 Sepulchral Epigrams Book 8 The Epigrams of St Gregory the Theologian translated by W R Paton Loeb Classical Library No 68 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1917 ISBN 978 0 674 99075 3 Online version at Harvard University Press Grimal Pierre The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Wiley Blackwell 1996 ISBN 978 0 631 20102 1 Hard Robin The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Based on H J Rose s Handbook of Greek Mythology Psychology Press 2004 ISBN 9780415186360 Google Books Herodotus Histories A D Godley translator Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1920 ISBN 0674991338 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray Ph D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hyginus Gaius Julius Fabulae in Apollodorus Libraryand Hyginus Fabulae Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology Translated with Introductions by R Scott Smith and Stephen M Trzaskoma Hackett Publishing Company 2007 ISBN 978 0 87220 821 6 Isocrates To Demonicus To Nicocles Nicocles or the Cyprians Panegyricus To Philip Archidamus Translated by George Norlin Loeb Classical Library No 209 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1928 ISBN 978 0 674 99231 3 Online version at Harvard University Press Online version at Perseus Digital Library Kovacs David 1998 Euripides Suppliant Women Electra Heracles Edited and translated by David Kovacs Loeb Classical Library No 9 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 674 99566 6 Online version at Harvard University Press Kovacs David 2002 Euripides Helen Phoenician Women Orestes Edited and translated by David Kovacs Loeb Classical Library No 11 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 674 99600 7 Online version at Harvard University Press Lloyd Jones Hugh Sophocles Fragments Edited and translated by Hugh Lloyd Jones Loeb Classical Library No 483 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 674 99532 1 Online version at Harvard University Press Most G W Hesiod The Shield Catalogue of Women Other Fragments Loeb Classical Library No 503 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2007 2018 ISBN 978 0 674 99721 9 Online version at Harvard University Press Page Denys Lionel Sir Select Papyri Volume III Poetry translated by Denys L Page Loeb Classical Library No 360 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1941 ISBN 978 0674993976 Online version at Harvard University Press Ovid Heroides in Heroides Amores Translated by Grant Showerman Revised by G P Goold Loeb Classical Library No 41 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1977 ISBN 978 0 674 99045 6 Online version at Harvard University Press The Oxford Classical Dictionary second edition Hammond N G L and Howard Hayes Scullard editors Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 0 19 869117 3 Parada Carlos Genealogical Guide to Greek Mythology Jonsered Paul Astroms Forlag 1993 ISBN 978 91 7081 062 6 Pausanias Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Plato Phaedrus in Plato in Twelve Volumes Vol 9 translated by Harold N Fowler Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1925 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Plutarch Lives Volume I Theseus and Romulus Lycurgus and Numa Solon and Publicola Translated by Bernadotte Perrin Loeb Classical Library No 46 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1914 ISBN 978 0 674 99052 4 Online version at Harvard University Press Theseus at the Perseus Digital Library Propertius Elegies Edited and translated by G P Goold Loeb Classical Library 18 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1990 Online version at Harvard University Press Quintus Smyrnaeus Posthomerica Edited and translated by Neil Hopkinson Loeb Classical Library No 19 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2018 ISBN 978 0 674 99716 5 Online version at Harvard University Press Race William H 1997a Pindar Nemean Odes Isthmian Odes Fragments Edited and translated by William H Race Loeb Classical Library No 485 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 674 99534 5 Online version at Harvard University Press Race William H 1997b Pindar Olympian Odes Pythian Odes Edited and translated by William H Race Loeb Classical Library No 56 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 674 99564 2 Online version at Harvard University Press Servius Commentary on the Aeneid of Vergil Georgius Thilo Ed 1881 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Latin Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology London 1873 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Sommerstein Alan H 2009a Aeschylus Persians Seven against Thebes Suppliants Prometheus Bound Edited and translated by Alan H Sommerstein Loeb Classical Library No 145 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 674 99627 4 Online version at Harvard University Press Sommerstein Alan H 2009b Aeschylus Fragments Edited and translated by Alan H Sommerstein Loeb Classical Library No 505 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 674 99629 8 Online version at Harvard University Press Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus in Sophocles Antigone The Women of Trachis Philoctetes Oedipus at Colonus Edited and translated by Hugh Lloyd Jones Loeb Classical Library No 21 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1994 ISBN 978 0 674 99558 1 Online version at Harvard University Press Statius Thebaid Volume I Thebaid Books 1 7 edited and translated by D R Shackleton Bailey Loeb Classical Library No 207 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 674 01208 0 Online version at Harvard University Press Stesichorus Ibycus Simonides Greek Lyric Volume III Stesichorus Ibycus Simonides and Others edited and translated by David A Campbell Loeb Classical Library No 476 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1991 ISBN 978 0 674 99525 3 Online version at Harvard University Press Strabo Geography translated by Horace Leonard Jones Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Books 6 14 Tripp Edward Crowell s Handbook of Classical Mythology Thomas Y Crowell Co First edition June 1970 ISBN 069022608X Tyrtaeus Solon Theognis Mimnermus Greek Elegiac Poetry From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC edited and translated by Douglas E Gerber Loeb Classical Library No 258 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 674 99582 6 Online version at Harvard University Press Virgil Aeneid books 1 6 in Eclogues Georgics Aeneid Books 1 6 translated by H Rushton Fairclough revised by G P Goold Loeb Classical Library No 63 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 674 99583 3 Online version at Harvard University Press West M L 2003 Greek Epic Fragments From the Seventh to the Fifth Centuries BC edited and translated by Martin L West Loeb Classical Library No 497 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 674 99605 2 Online version at Harvard University Press Portals nbsp Ancient Greece nbsp Myths Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adrastus amp oldid 1144995163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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