Capys of Dardania explained

Type:Greek
Capys
Abode:Dardania
Parents:Assaracus and Hieromneme or Clytodora
Siblings:Ganymede
Children:Anchises and Acoetes
Deity Of:King of Dardania
Member Of:the Dardanian Royal Family
Consort:Hieromneme or Themiste (or Themis)
Successor:Anchises
Predecessor:Assaracus

In Roman and Greek mythology, Capys was a king of Dardania during the Iliad and Aeneid.[1]

Family

Capys was the son of Assaracus[2] by either Hieromneme (naiad daughter of Simois)[3] or Clytodora.[4] He succeeded his father as king over the Dardanians and married a Hieromneme or his cousin Themiste, the daughter of Ilus, founder of Troy. With her, he fathered Anchises and Acoetes.[5] The former son who was a handsome lad later become the beloved of the goddess Aphrodite and the father of the famous Aeneas while the latter one, became the father of the priest Laocoon. In some versions of the myth, Capys was the brother of Ganymede while his mother Hieromneme was also called his wife.

Mythology

Capys or a different Capys, founded the city of Capua.[6]

Notes

  1. [Virgil]
  2. [Dictys Cretensis]
  3. [Bibliotheca (Pseudo-Apollodorus)|Apollodorus]
  4. [Dionysius of Halicarnassus]
  5. [Gaius Julius Hyginus|Hyginus]
  6. Virgil, Aeneid 10.145

References