Eurypylus
In
Greek mythology,
Eurypylus (
Greek:
Εὐρύπυλος) was the name of several different people.
One
Eurypylus was a son of
Thestius. He participated in the hunt for the
Calydonian Boar, during which he insulted
Atalanta and was killed by
Meleager.
Another
Eurypylus was a
Thessalonian king, son of
Euaemon. He led the Thessalians during the
Trojan war being a former suitor of
Helen. He led one of the larger contigents of ships, 40. By all accounts, he fought valiantly during the war and is often listed amongst the fist rank of
Greek heroes such as
Idomeneus,
Diomedes,
Telamonian Aias, etc. In the
Iliad he was one of several to accept
Hector's challenge to single combat, but was eliminated in the drawing of lots. He went to the aid of Telemonian Aias when the latter was wounded and tired from hard fighting and was compelled to withdraw from combat. In defending Aias he killed
Aspisaon but was wounded and put out of action from one of
Paris' arrows. This happened in the same book that all the other major Greeks were wounded and put out of action. When he withdrew from battle his wounds were tended by
Patroclus. While Patroclus was tending his wound Eurypylus convinced the former to enter into combat even if
Achilleus refused to join. He was also one of the Greeks to enter the
Trojan Horse. After the War Eurypylus got a chest as part of his victory spoils. The chest was abandond by
Aeneas when he fled from Troy and then
Cassandra placed a curse on it to whichever Greek would open the chest. Inside the chest was an image of
Dionysus, made by
Hephaestus and given to the Trojans by
Zeus. When Eurypylus opened the chest he went mad. During a period of sanity he went to
Delphi to seek a cure for his malady. The priestess told him to find a people making an unusual sacrifice and settle there. Eventually he came to
Aroe (later
Patrae), where he found people sacraficing a youth and a maiden to
Artemis, to propitiate the goddess for the crime of
Comaetho and
Melanippus, who had polluted her shrine. The people of the town recognised him as a leader an oracle had said would come to them and made them their king. After this Eurypylus regained his sanity and the people of Patrae no longer needed to make human sacrifices. His tomb is in the city, and after the events the people of the area sacrificed tohim as a hero at the festival of Dionysus.
A third
Eurypylus was son of
Telephus and
Astyoche. His mother bribed him with a golden vine to fight on the side of the
Trojans during the end of the
Trojan War in command of a group of
Mysians. He fought valiantly and killed the Greek warriors
Machaon and
Nireus and was finally killed by
Neoptolemus.
Another
Eurypylus was king of the island of Cos. He was son of
Poseidon and
Astypalaea, and father of
Chalciope. He slain by Heracles when the latter, on his return from Troy, attacked the island, taking the city by night.
Yet another
Eurypylus was a son of Poseidon and
Celaeno, and ruled over the Fortunate Islands. He had a brother named
Lycus.