Chapter 16, The Trojan War
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♠ Scholia at Lykophron, Alexandra 319 – Lykophronis Alexandra, vol. 2, pp. 127-28, ed E. Scheer. Berlin 1908.
♠ Scholia at Lykophron, Alexandra 224 – Lykophronis Alexandra, vol. 2, pp. 103-4, ed E. Scheer. Berlin 1908.
♠ Apollodoros, Bibliotheke (Library) 3.12.3
And Ilus married Eurydice, daughter of Adrastus, and begat Laomedon, who married Strymo, daughter of Scamander; but according to some his wife was Placia, daughter of Otreus, and according to others she was Leucippe; and he begat five sons, Tithonus, Lampus, Clytius, Hicetaon, Podarces, and three daughters, Hesione, Cilla, and Astyoche; and by a nymph Calybe he had a son Bucolion. Greek Text
♠ Homer, Iliad 3.146
And they that were about Priam and Panthous and Thymoetes and Lampus and Clytius and Hicetaon, scion of Ares, and Ucalegon and Antenor, men of prudence both, sat as elders of the people at the Scaean gates. Greek Text
♠ Diodoros Siculus, Library of History 3.67.5
and also by Thymoetes, the son of Thymoetes, the son of Laomedon, who lived at the same time as Orpheus, wandered over many regions of the inhabited world, and penetrated to the western part of Libya as far as the ocean. Greek Text
♠ Vergil. Aeneid 2.32-34
Thymoetes then
bade lead it through the gates, and set on high
within our citadel,—or traitor he,
or tool of fate in Troy‘s predestined fall. Latin Text
♠ Servius, Scholia at Vergil, Aeneid 2.32 – Servii Grammatici qui feruntur in Vergilii Carmina commentarii: Aeneis, ed. G. Thilo and H. Hagen, vol. 1 pt. 1, pp. 220-21. Leipzig 1881.
Edited by Elena Bianchelli, Retired Senior Lecturer of Classical Languages and Culture, Univ. of Georgia, January 2023
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