Echemus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In Greek mythology, Echemus (/ˈɛkəməs/; Ancient Greek: Ἔχεμος, Ekhemos) was the Tegean king of Arcadia who succeeded Lycurgus.

Echemus was the son of Aeropus, son of King Cepheus.[1] He was married to Timandra, daughter of Leda and Tyndareus of Sparta.[2] Timandra bore him a son, Ladocus,[3] before deserting Echemus for Phyleus, the king of Dulichium. This lineage made Echemus a part of the Greek mythical family Atreidai, which stood in direct opposition to the Heracleidae, and emphasised the "pre-dorian" ancestry of the Tegeans and Arcadians.[4]

An alternative genealogy makes Echemus a son of Aeropus, son of the war god Ares rather than Cepheus, this was a genealogy presented to Pausanias in Tegea, which he includes in his description of the temple of Ares Aphenius between the cities of Tegea and Pallantium.[5]

Mythology

References

Literature

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI