Pandion (hero)

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Remains of the Monument of Eponymous Heroes in the Ancient Agora of Athens.

Pandion (/ˈpændiən/ or /ˈpændiɒn/; Ancient Greek: Πανδίων) was the eponymous hero of the Attic tribe Pandionis, which was created as part of the tribal reforms of Cleisthenes at the end of the sixth century BC.[1] He is usually assumed to be one of the two legendary kings of Athens, Pandion I or Pandion II.

The relationship between Pandion, the eponymous hero, and the two legendary Athenian kings Pandion I and Pandion II is unclear, but most sources assume that the hero was one or the other of these two kings. The situation is further complicated by the fact that either Pandion I or Pandion II may have been invented to fill a gap in the mythical history of Athens,[2] and that originally there may have been only one Pandion.[3]

Demosthenes' Funeral Oration (338 BC) makes the father of the famous sisters Procne and Philomelausually considered to be Pandion Ithe eponymous hero of the Pandionidae.[4] However, the 2nd century AD geographer Pausanias does not know which king Pandion was honored as the eponymous hero,[5] and Pausanias makes Pandion II the father of Procne and Philomela.[6]

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