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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Diodorus Siculus, Library. Search the whole document.
Found 3 total hits in 1 results.
Phrygia (Turkey) (search for this): book 9, chapter 29
Adrastus, a man of Phrygia, while out hunting with Atys, as he was called, the son
of the Lydian king, Croesus, unwittingly struck and killed the boy while hurling his spear at a
boar. And although he had slain the boy unwittingly, he declared that he did not deserve to
live; consequently he urged the king not to spare his life, but to slay him at once upon the
tomb of the dead youth. Croesus at first was enraged at
Adrastus for the murder, as he considered it, of his son, and threatened to burn him alive; but
when he saw that Adrastus was ready and willing to give his life in punishment for the dead
boy, he thereupon abandoned his anger and gave up his thought of punishing the slayer, laying
the blame upon his own fortune and not upon the intent of Adrastus. Nevertheless Adrastus, on
his own initiative, went to the tomb of Atys and slew himself upon it.Const. Exc. 2 (1),
pp. 219-220.