[8]
And he had sons by the daughters of Thespius,1 to wit:
by Procris he had Antileon and Hippeus( for the eldest daughter bore
twins); by Panope he had Threpsippas; by Lyse he had Eumedes; ... he had Creon;
by Epilais he had Astyanax; by Certhe he had Iobes; by Eurybia he had Polylaus; by Patro
he had Archemachus; by Meline he had Laomedon; by Clytippe he had Eurycapys; by Eubote he
had Eurypylus; by Aglaia he had Antiades; by Chryseis he had Onesippus; by Oriahe had
Laomenes; by Lysidice he had Teles; by Menippis he had Entelides; by Anthippe he had
Hippodromus; by Eury ... he had Teleutagoras; by Hippo he had Capylus; by Euboea he had Olympus; by Nice he had Nicodromus; by Argele he had Cleolaus; by Exole he
had Erythras; by Xanthis he had Homolippus; by Stratonice he had Atromus; by Iphis he had
Celeustanor; by Laothoe he had Antiphus; by Antiope he had Alopius; by Calametis he had
Astybies; by Phyleis he had Tigasis, by Aeschreis he had Leucones; by Anthea ... ; by
Eurypyle he had Archedicus; by Erato he had Dynastes; by Asopis he had Mentor; by Eone he had Amestrius; by Tiphyse he had Lyncaeus; by Olympusa he had Halocrates; by
Heliconis he had Phalias; by Hesychia he had Oestrobles; by Terpsicrate he had Euryopes;
by Elachia he had Buleus; by Nicippe he had Antimachus; by Pyrippehe had Patroclus; by
Praxithea he had Nephus; by Lysippe he had Erasippus; by Toxicrate he had Lycurgus; by
Marse he had Bucolus; by Eurytele he had Leucippus; by Hippocrate he had Hippozygus. These
he had by the daughters of Thespius. And he had sons by other women: by Deianira, daughter
of Oeneus, he had Hyllus, Ctesippus, Glenus and Onites;2 by Megara, daughter of Creon, he had Therimachus, Deicoon, and Creontiades;3 by
Omphale he had Agelaus,4 from whom the family of Croesus was descended,5 by Chalciope, daughter of
Eurypylus, he had Thettalus; by Epicaste, daughter of Augeas, he had Thestalus; by
Parthenope, daughter of Stymphalus, he had
Everes; by Auge, daughter of Aleus, he had Telephus;6 by Astyoche, daughter of Phylas, he
had Tlepolemus;7 by Astydamia, daughter of Amyntor, he had Ctesippus; by Autonoe,
daughter of Pireus, he had Palaemon.
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1 A short list of the sons of Herakles is given by Hyginus, Fab. 162. As to the daughters of Thespius, see above, Apollod. 2.4.10.
2 Compare Diod. 4.37.1.
3 Compare Apollod. 2.4.11; Scholiast on Hom. Od. 11.269, who agrees with Apollodorus as to the names of the children whom Herakles had by Megara. But other writers gave different lists. Dinias the Argive, for example, gave the three names mentioned by Apollodorus, but added to them Deion. See the Scholiast on Pind. I. 5.61(104).
4 Diod. 4.31.8 and Ovid, Her. ix.53ff. give Lamus as the name of the son whom Omphale bore to Herakles.
5 According to Hdt. 1.7 the dynasty which preceded that of Croesus on the throne of Sardes traced their descent from Alcaeus, the son of Herakles by a slave girl. It is a curious coincidence that Croesus, like his predecessor or ancestor Herakles, is said to have attempted to burn himself on a pyre when the Persians captured Sardes. See Bacch. 3.24-62, ed. Jebb. The tradition is supported by the representation of the scene on a red-figured vase, which may have been painted about forty years after the capture of Sardes and the death or captivity of Croesus. See Baumeister, Denkmäler des klassischen Altertums, ii.796, fig. 860. Compare Adonis, Attis, Osiris, 3rd ed. i.174ff. The Herakles whom Greek tradition associated with Omphale was probably an Oriental deity identical with the Sandan of Tarsus. See Adonis, Attis, Osiris, i.124ff.
6 See above, Apollod. 2.7.4, and below, Apollod. 3.9.1.
7 See above, Apollod. 2.7.6.
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