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Role of Patroclus 1 Patroclus 1 had in any case to go to war if he was to comply with The Oath of Tyndareus, which he swore along with the other SUITORS OF HELEN. For when Helen was about to be given in marriage, many princes came from all Hellas to win her hand, and among them was Patroclus 1 from Phthia, a city of Phthiotis in southern Thessaly. Patroclus 1 contributed ten ships to the Achaean fleet (see also ACHAEAN LEADERS), and fought bravely. But above all, Patroclus 1 is remembered for his death and its consequences. Las killed by Patroclus 1
It is told that Patroclus 1 killed Las, the founder of a town called Las near Gythium in Laconia, when he was on his way to ask the hand of Helen of Tyndareus. It has also been said that Las was killed by Achilles, but some considered it unlikely because Achilles is not counted among the SUITORS OF HELEN. Another murder sends him into exile On another occsasion, at the city of Opus in the district called Opuntian Locris, Patroclus 1, during a quarrel over a game of dice, killed the boy Clitonymus, the son of Amphidamas 3, and being obliged to escape, he and his father sought protection in the house of Peleus where he lived for a time, becoming Achilles' favourite. Zeus reveals the will of Heaven When Achilles joined the Achaean army with his regiment of Myrmidons, Phoenix 2 and Patroclus 1 were his closest companions. Phoenix 2, son of King Amyntor 1 of Ormenium, a city near Mount Pelion in Magnesia, had once been blinded by his own father, but his sight was restored by the Centaur Chiron. Phoenix 2, who was an old man at the time of the Trojan War, died on his way back from Troy, being buried by Neoptolemus, Achilles' son. But Patroclus 1 was fated to die at Troy, and his death redirected Achilles' wrath against the Trojans:
Patroclus 1 in the Achaean camp It was Patroclus 1, who following Achilles' instructions, gave the girl Briseis to the envoys of Agamemnon, who had come to Achilles' tent to claim her, and later, while Achilles' wrath was still strong, and envoys were sent by Agamemnon to offer him the seven tripods, the seven women, the seven cities, and many other gifts, should he put his wrath aside, it was Patroclus 1 who entertained Achilles and the envoys when they met, mingling the drinks, preparing the cups, making the fire blaze, roasting the meat, dealing the bread, and offering sacrifices to the gods. At this time Achilles found consolation in Diomede 3, a girl from Lesbos, and Patroclus 1 slept with Iphis 3, a girl whom Achilles gave him when he captured the fortress of Scyros (for there are those who think that the story of Achilles disguised as a girl in Scyros is nonsense). Idle troops While Achilles' mind and heart were still controlled by his wrath, the Myrmidons, including Patroclus 1, did not participate in the fight. Therefore the Achaeans suffered heavy losses, and the Trojans were able to threaten the Achaean ships. These defeats added pleasure to wrath in Achilles' heart, and so it had to be, for Zeus had promised to Achilles' mother Thetis to honour her son, which he fulfilled by causing trouble to the Achaean army. Achilles starts to change his mind However, when Achilles thought he had seen Machaon from Tricca (a city in western Thessaly), the son of Asclepius, wounded and being carried by Nestor, he started to pity the Achaeans, and sent Patroclus 1 to find out whether the wounded man was indeed Machaon, the healer who cured the wound that the arrow of Pandarus 1 had inflicted on Menelaus, and who later would heal the wound of Philoctetes, the archer whom the army had left in Lemnos. Nestor reminds him of his duties Nestor thoroughly informed Patroclus 1 of the distress of the army and the many wounded, among which were Diomedes 2, Odysseus, Agamemnon, and Eurypylus 1. He also reminded him of his duties; for Nestor had visited Peleus' house when Patroclus 1 lived there, and had heard what Patroclus 1's father had told his son when war approached:
Nestor asks him influence his friend Nestor, who wished Patroclus 1 to persuade Achilles of fighting again, added:
Suggestive words And he also uttered a tempting suggestion:
Patroclus 1 meets Eurypylus 1 These words moved Patroclus 1's heart, and as he was running back he met Eurypylus 1, leader of the Ormenians, wounded in the thigh and limping out of the battle, and Eurypylus 1 alarmed him even more, for he said:
Having made him lie down, Patroclus 1 cut from his thigh the arrow with a knife, washed the wound, and put on it a bitter root, which, staying all pains, made the wound dry and the blood cease. Achilles gives up the worst of his wrath But as he was taking care of Eurypylus 1, the Trojans attacked even harder … So he hasty left with the idea of coming to Achilles and urge him to fight. And having met him, he bade him with tears in his eyes to fight or let him fight in his stead and with his armour, just as Nestor had suggested. By then even Achilles had understood that no state of mind lasts forever:
Achilles' advice And giving him his armour, Achilles sent his friend to the battle at the front of the Myrmidons, advising him just to remove the Trojans from the Achaean ships, and under no circumstances go in their pursuit. Those killed by Patroclus 1 To drive the horses, Patroclus 1 chose Automedon from Scyros, Achilles' squire and charioteer, and went into battle. The terrified Trojans believed that Achilles was fighting again, and Patroclus 1 killed many among them.
Death and loss of arms The will of Heaven is impossible to curb. For as the Trojans were being defeated, Patroclus 1, disobeying Achilles' advice, committed the fatal error of going in pursuit of the Trojans and Lycians. So in the middle of the battle, Apollo came behind him and stroke his back with the flat of his hand, knocking off his helmet. Then the god undid his corslet, and when he was defenceless, Euphorbus came from behind and struck him with a spear between the shoulders, and as Patroclus 1 crept wounded, Hector 1 killed him with a short spear-cast, and took the armour that Patroclus 1 had worn. Euphorbus This Euphorbus, the first to hit Patroclus 1 after the god, was son of Panthous and Phrontis 2. Panthous, one of the Elders of the city of Troy and Apollo's priest, was son of Othrys. Polydamas, a Trojan leader who was commander in the same company as Hector 1 and wished to render Helen back to the Achaeans, was also son of Panthous. And so was Hyperenor 4, whom Menelaus slew. Panthous himself was killed at Troy. It is said about Euphorbus that he became Pythagoras, the celebrated sage and mathematician, in a later life. The body of Patroclus 1
There was a big fight for the body of Patroclus 1, which was finally retrieved from the field by Menelaus and Meriones, a Cretan leader and squire of King Idomeneus 1 of Crete, while the AIANTES (Ajax 1 and Ajax 2) protected their retreat. After Patroclus 1's death, Achilles returned to the fight, and slew Hector 1, and later Paris slew him.
When Achilles was dead, the Achaeans mourned for seventeen days, and then they burned his body, putting the ashes in a golden two-handled urn that Hephaestus wrought. This urn, which was the gift of Dionysus 2 to Thetis, was given by her to the Achaeans, and they mingled Achilles' ashes in it with those of Patroclus 1. They were both buried in the White Island, which is in the Black Sea near the mouths of the Danube. The soul of Patroclus 1 Leonymus affirms that he indeed saw the soul of Patroclus 1 in the White Island. Leonymus was a general from the city of Crotona in southern Italy, which was at war with the Italian Locri. Being related to the Opuntians of Hellas, they believed that Ajax 2 helped them in battle, and so they always left a place empty for him in their lines. On a certain occasion, Leonymus attacked the enemy at that point, and was mysteriously wounded. He came to Delphi to inquire about his wound, and the oracle instructed him to sail to the White Island where Ajax 2 would cure his wound. Having returned healed, Leonymus declared that he had seen Patroclus 1, Achilles, and the AIANTES, among others. |
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Parentage (four versions) |
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Menoetius 2 & Philomela 2 |
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Menoetius 2 & Sthenele 2 |
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Menoetius 2 & Periopis |
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Menoetius 2 & Polymele 1 |
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Menoetius 2, who is counted among the ARGONAUTS, is son of Actor 3 and Aegina, the daughter of the river god Asopus who was seduced by Zeus, which means that Aeacus, the grandfather of Achilles, was his half-brother. Actor 3 is son of King Deion of Phocis, son of the Thessalian king Aeolus 1, son of Hellen 1 (the eponym of the Hellenes), son of Deucalion 1, the man who survived the Flood. Sthenele 2 is daughter of Acastus, son of King Pelias 1 of Iolcus, who sent Jason and the ARGONAUTS to fetch the Golden Fleece. Periopis is the daughter of Pheres 1, founder of Pherae in Thessaly and son of Cretheus 1, son of Aeolus 1. Polymele 1 is daughter of Peleus, a half-sister of Achilles of mother unknown. |
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Abolengo Album - High Resolution Genealogical Charts Names in this chart Achilles, Actor 3, Aeacus, Aegina, Aeolus 1, Asopus, Cephisus, Creusa 1, Deimachus 1, Deion, Deucalion 1, Diogenia 1, Diomede 1, Enarete, Erechtheus, Erichthonius 2, Hellen 1, Ladon 1, Menoetius 2, Metope 1, Orseis, Pandion 2, Patroclus 1, Peleus, Phrasimus, Polymele 1, Praxithea 2, Praxithea 4, Pyrrha 1, Thetis, Xuthus 1, Zeus, Zeuxippe 2. |
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