Sithon (mythology)

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In Greek mythology, Sithon (/ˈsθɒn/ or /ˈsθən/; Ancient Greek: Σίθων) was a king of the Odomanti or Hadomanti in Thrace, and presumably the eponym of the peninsula Sithonia and the tribe Sithones.

Sithon was the son of either Poseidon and Ossa[1] or of Ares and Anchiroe.[2] He was married to the nymph Mendeis,[1] though Anchiroe is otherwise also given as his wife rather than mother,[3] and had at least two daughters: Rhoeteia, eponym of the promontory of Rhoetium in the Troad,[2] and Pallene. One source gives him as the father of the Thracian princess Phyllis, who loved Demophon of Athens.[4]

Mythology

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