1 Progenitor, Lapithes (or Lapithus)
In 1387 BC,  Aeolus and Stilbe had a son, Lapithes. [1]
Aeolus was  the son of Hippotes, the son of Mimas, the son of Aeolus, the son of Hellen,  the son of Deucalion, and lived in Arne in Thessaly. [2]
Stilbe was  the daughter of Peneius, the son of Tectamus, the son of Dorus, the son of  Hellen, the son of Deucalion, and lived in Doris, north of the Peneius River.  [3]
Thus,  Lapithes was born to Aeolian father and Dorian mother.
In 1365 BC,  Lapithes led the Aeolians from Arne to the north of the Peneius River. [4]
The Aeolians,  led by Lapithes, changed their name to Lapiths.
Lapithes  married Eurynomus' daughter, Orsinome, and had three sons: Periphas, Lesbos,  and Phorbas, as well as a daughter, Diomede. [5]
Eurynomus's  genealogy is unknown, but since Lapithes' mother, Stilbe, was a Dorian, it is  likely that Eurynomus was also a Dorian.
Lapithes is  also believed to have had another son, Aeolus.
      2 Birthplace  of Lapiths
        Lapithes's  settlement is presumed to have been the land west of Gyrton, the land fought  over by the Dorians and Lapiths during the time of Heracles. [6]
        To the west  of this land was Doris, where the Dorians, descended from Dorus, the son of  Hellen, son of Deucalion, lived.
        In other  words, Lapithes settled between his mother's homeland, Doris, and the land to  the east of it, inhabited by the Aenianians and Perrhaebians.
      3 Periphas, son  of Lapithes
        In 1331 BC,  Periphas married Astyagia, daughter of Hypseus, son of Peneius, from Doris.  Periphas and Astyagia had eight sons. Periphas' descendants grew in power and  came to be called the Lapiths. [7]
        Of his eight  sons, only Anion is mentioned in historical records. [8]
        In addition  to Anion, he is believed to have had two other sons: Elatus and Andraemon.
      3.1 Anion, son  of Periphas
        In 1301 BC,  Anion married Perimela, daughter of Amythaon of Phyllus in Thessaly. Antion and  Perimela had a son, Ixion. [9]
        Ixion also  had a half-brother, Phlegyas. [10]
      3.1.1 Ixion  (or Gyrton), son of Antion
        In 1276 BC,  Ixion married Dia, daughter of Eioneus (or Deioneus), son of Magnes, who lived  near Mount Olympus. Ixion and Dia had a son, Peirithous (or Pirithous,  Perithous). [11]
        Ixion and  Phlegyas led the Lapiths in expelling the Perrhaebians who lived in the Peneius  River basin. [12]
        Ixion and Dia  shared a common ancestor, Aeolus, son of Hippotes of Arne.
        Ixion had  another wife, Nephele. [13]
        Nephele was a  Centaur, and she bore Ixion two sons, Eurytion and Imbrus. [14]
      3.1.1.1  Peirithous, son of Ixion
        During the  reign of Peirithous, the Lapiths, under his leadership, inhabited the Peneius  River basin, driving out the Aenianians, Perrhaebians, and Centaurs and  expanding their territory. [15]
        It is said  that a race of half-human, half-beast creatures called the Centaurs were born  between Ixion and Nephele. [16]
        The Centaurs  were people who rode bareback on horses and were driven out of Thessaly by the  Lapiths. [17]
        Peirithous  married Hippodameia, daughter of Butes, son of Teleon, son of Pandion, the  eighth king of Athens. Theseus, son of Aegeus, the ninth king of Athens, was  also invited to their feast. [18]
        Peirithous'  wife, Hippodameia, was the daughter of Theseus's paternal cousin.
        Peirithous  and Theseus were also close friends. [19]
        When  Peirithous' descendants were expelled from Thessaly in 1186 BC, the Athenians  welcomed them back due to their ancestral friendship. Peirithous' descendants  became the Oineis, one of the ten tribes of Athens. [20]
      3.1.1.2  Eurytion, son of Ixion
        Eurytion was  the leader of the Centaurs and fought against the Lapiths. [21]
      3.1.2  Phlegyas, son of Antion
        In 1280 BC,  Phlegyas and Ixion, led by the Lapiths, drove out the Perrhaebians and founded  Gyrton. [22]
        The Lapiths  who lived in Gyrton were called Phlegyae after Phlegyas, but they came to be  called Gyrtonians. [23]
        It is said  that Gyrton was named after Phlegyas' brother, Gyrton. [24]
        However,  since Ixion and his son, Peirithous, ruled Gyrton, Gyrton is likely another  name for Ixion. [25]
        Thus, during  Phlegyas' time, the town was called Phlegyas, but after Ixion succeeded  Phlegyas, the town took on the name Gyrton.
        Phlegyas had  two sons: Eilatidas and Coronis. [26]
      3.1.2.1  Eilatidas, son of Phlegyas
        Eilatidas'  daughter, Coronis (or Epione), married Asclepius of Tricca. [27]
        Since  Eilatidas did not succeed his father, Phlegyas, and Ixion succeeded him, it is  assumed that Eilatidas predeceased his father.
      3.2 Elatus,  likely the son of Periphas
        Elatus' son,  Polyphemus, was a Lapith, and Elatus' descendants lived in Larissa and Gyrton.  [28]
        Therefore, it  is assumed that Elatus was the son of Periphas, the son of Lapithes. [29]
        Elatus had  four sons: Caeneus, Ampycus, Polyphemus, and Ischys, and two daughters: Dotia  and Caenis.
      3.2.1  Caeneus, son of Elatus
        Coronus, son  of Caeneus, led the Lapiths in battle against the Dorians and was killed by  Heracles. [30]
        Caeneus'  descendant, Lysidice, married Ajax (or Aias), son of Telamon, and had Philaeus  (or Philius). [31]
        Herodotus  incorrectly states in two places that Cypselus, son of Eetion of Corinth, was a  descendant of Philaeus. [32]
        Cypselus's  paternal ancestor was Melas, son of Antasus. [33]
        Cypselus's  maternal ancestor was Aletes, the first ruler of Corinth among the Dorians.  [34]
        Herodotus  states that Cypselus of Athens, father of Miltiades, was a descendant of  Philaeus, confusing Cypselus of Athens with Cypselus of Corinth. [35]
      3.2.2  Ampycus, son of Elatus
        In 1264 BC,  Ampycus emigrated to Oechalia, founded by Melaneus, son of his cousin Aeolus.  [36]
        After  Melaneus emigrated to Messenia in 1305 BC, Ampycus likely emigrated to the  deserted town of Oechalia and rebuilt it. [37]
        Ampycus,  along with his son Mopsus, was a prophet. It is believed that he was taught the  art of prophecy by Melampus, the brother of Perimela, wife of his uncle Antion.  [38]
      3.2.2.1  Mopsus, son of Ampycus
        In 1243 BC,  Mopsus migrated from Oechalia to the north-northeast of Gyrton and founded  Mopsium. [39]
        Mopsus  appears in the story of the Argonauts' expedition. [40]
      3.2.3  Polyphemus, son of Elatus
        Polyphemus  lived in Larissa and appears in the story of the Argonauts' expedition. [41]
      3.2.4 Ischys,  son of Elatus
        Ischys  married Coronis, daughter of Phlegyas, from Gyrton, and had a son, Asclepius  (or Aesculapius). [42]
        Coronis grew  up in Amyrus, on the shores of the Boebian lake in the Dotium plain. [43]
        In 1260 BC,  Ischys emigrated to Tricca.
        Tricca, named  after Tricca, daughter of Peneius, son of Tectamus, son of Dorus, was inhabited  by Dorians. [44]
        Around the  time Ischys emigrated to Tricca, Autolycus, son of Deimachus, who had  previously lived in the town, emigrated to Sinope on the southern shore of the  Black Sea. [45]
        After the  departure of the Dorian Autolycus, Ischys the Lapith lived in Tricca, but the  town's inhabitants were likely largely Dorians. Tricca does not appear in the  later battle between Heracles and Lapiths.
      3.2.4.1  Asclepius, son of Ischys
        Asclepius is  said to have been born in Epidaurus, Argolis. [46]
        The mother of  Asclepius' grandfather, Phlegyas, was from Epidaurus. [47]
        The legend  that Asclepius was born in Epidaurus likely arose from the worship of  Asclepius, who had ties to the town.
        Strabo  reports that Asclepius was born on the banks of the Lethaeus River, which flows  through Tricca in Thessaly. [48]
        Tricca was  home to the oldest shrine of Asclepius. [49]
      3.2.4.1.1  Asclepius and Medicine
        It was the  Egyptian Apis who introduced medicine to Greece. [50]
        Apis  accompanied Acrisius of Argos from Egypt and migrated to Nauplia near Argos.  [51]
        Amyclas,  brother of Acrisius' wife Eurydice, was married to Diomede, daughter of  Lapithes. [52]
        In other  words, Lapiths was the first to master the medical arts introduced from Egypt.
        Asclepius  then further developed these techniques. [53]
      3.2.4.1.2  Asclepius' son Machaon
        3.2.4.1.2.1  Machaon's wife Anticleia
        In 1200 BC,  Machaon married Anticleia, daughter of Diocles, who lived in Pharae, Messenia.  [54]
        Machaon's  residence in Tricca in northern Thessaly and Anticleia's residence in Pharae in  Messenia were more than 280 km apart in a straight line.
        The marriage  between Machaon and Anticleia is presumed to have taken place as follows:
        After the  death of Idas, son of Aphareus, Nestor, son of Neleus, inherited Messenia, but  some residents refused to obey him. [55]
        These  residents were likely the Lapiths, who migrated from Thessaly to Andania when  Perieres, son of Aeolus, was appointed ruler from Andania in Messenia. [56]
        The Lapiths  also lived in Arene, founded by Apahareus, son of Perieres, on the west coast  of Messenia. [57]
        Nestor, who  founded Pylus near Arena, attempted to use the influence of the leading Lapiths  in Thessaly to subjugate the Lapiths.
        At the same  time, Diocles, son of Ortilochus of Pharae in Messenia, also felt threatened by  Tyndareus of Sparta. [58]
        Nestor, the  leader of Messenia, therefore attempted to gain the Lapiths' support by  marrying Diocles' daughter, Anticleia, to a leading Lapiths.
        Shorterly,  most of the Lapiths in Thessaly had lost their power after a battle with  Heracles, leaving only Asclepius of Tricca to retain his influence. [59]
        In 1208 BC,  Nestor visited Tricca and was welcomed by Asclepius. [60]
        Asclepius had  two sons, Machaon and Podalirus, but Podalirus was not yet of marriageable age.  Machaon already had three sons, but he decided to marry Anticleia. [61]
      3.2.4.1.2.2  Machaon's Descendants
        Machaon's  sons by his first wife, Polemocrates, Alexandre, and Sphyrus, lived in Argolis.  Anticleia's two sons, Nicomachus and Gorgasus, followed in the footsteps of  their grandfather, Diocles, and lived in Pharae, Messenia. [63]
        Nicomachus, a  descendant of Nicomachus, married Phaestis, a descendant of one of the  colonists who led a colony from Chalcis in Euboea to Stageira near the  Chalcidice Peninsula.
        In 384 BC,  Nicomachus and Phaestis had a son, Aristotle. [64]
      3.2.4.1.3  Podalirus (or Podalirius or Podaleirius), son of Asclepius
        3.2.4.1.3.1  Founding of Syrnus
        After his  campaign against Troy and the defeat of the Achaeans, Podalirus wandered Asia  Minor with the seer Calchas, Polypoetes, son of Peirithous, and Leonteus, son  of Coronus. [65]
        Polypoetes  and Leonteus settled in Colophon. [66]
        Podalirus  married Syrna, daughter of Damaethus, in Bybastus, Caria. Damaethus is presumed  to be the son of Staphylus, son of Ariadne, daughter of Minos.
        Podalirus  then founded Syrnus in Caria. [67]
      3.2.4.1.3.2  Descendants of Podalirus
        Descendants  of Podalirus, son of Asclepius, continued to live in Cos, near Syrnus, carrying  on the medical arts. Hippocrates, known as the Father of Medicine in the early  4th century BC, was the 20th generation descendant of Heracles and the 19th  generation descendant of Asclepius. [68]
        Descendants  of Thessalus (or Thettalus), son of Heracles, lived in Cos, and it is believed  that they formed a marriage alliance with the descendants of Podalirus living  in Syrnus.
        Hippocrates  was friends with Perdiccas, king of Macedonia. [69]
        Hippocrates,  son of Draco, son of Hippocrates, treated Roxane, who was imprisoned in  Amphipolis after the death of Alexander the Great, and was killed by Cassander,  son of Antipater. [70]
      4 Lesbos, son  of Lapithes
        In 1340 BC, Lesbos led Lapiths to Pelasgia, where his  uncle Macareus had already settled, and married Macareus' daughter Methyma.  [71]
        After  Macareus's settlement, Pelasgia, also known as the House of Macareus, came to  be called Lesbos after Lesbos's name. [72]
      5 Phorbas, son  of Lapithes
        In 1320 BC,  Phorbas, son of Lapithes, emigrated from Thessaly to Rhodes. [73]
        It is  believed that Leucippus, son of Macareus, summoned Phorbas to Rhodes. Phorbas  was the son of Lapithes, brother of Leucippus's father, Macareus, and Phorbas  and Leucippus were cousins.
        It is  believed that Phorbas traveled to Rhodes to aid the Aeolians, led by Leucippus,  who were suffering from conflict with the Phoenicians.
        In 1306 BC,  Phorbas emigrated from Rhodes to Olenus, northwest of the Peloponnesus. [74]
        Diodorus  reports that King Alector of Elis summoned Phorbas. [75]
        However,  Phorbas, together with the Heliadae and Aeolians, fought against the  Phoenicians, but was presumably defeated and exiled from the island.
        Among the  Aeolians who migrated from Lesbos to Rhodes with Leucippus were Aeolians who  migrated from Olenus to Lesbos with Aeolus' son, Macareus. [76]
        Phorbas is  thought to have migrated to Olenus with the Aeolians.
        Before  migrating to Rhodes, Phorbas had a daughter, Pronoe.
        After moving  to Olenus, Phorbas married Hyrmina, the daughter of Epeius of Elis, and they  had a son named Actor and a daughter named Astydameia. Dexamenus is also  believed to be Phorbas' son. [77]
      5.1 Actor,  son of Phorbas
        In 1285 BC,  Actor migrated from Olenus to the sea west of Elis and founded Hyrmina, named  after his mother. [78]
        Actor married  Molione, daughter of Molus from Pleuron, and had twin sons, Cteatus and  Eurytus. [79]
        In 1265 BC,  Hipponus, son of Actor's brother Dexamenus, founded Olenus between Pleuron and  Calydon in Aetolia.
        Hipponous was  able to build a town in Aetolia because his uncle Actor's wife, Molione, was a  native of Pleuron. [80]
      5.1.1 Actor's  Twin Sons
        Actor's twin  sons married Theronice and Theraephone, twin daughters of Dexamenus, from  Olenus. Cteatus and Theronice had a son, Amphimachus, and Eurytus and  Theraephone had a son, Thalpius. [81]
        Cteatus and  Eurytus were appointed generals by Augeas of Elis when he learned that Heracles  was preparing to attack Elis. [82]
        The brothers  were brave warriors, and Heracles attacked Elis, but suffered repeated defeats  and called a truce without a clear victory. [83]
        The brothers,  learning that Heracles was ill, attacked him and killed many, including  Heracles' half-brother, Iphicles. [84]
        Among them  was Heracles' half-brother, Iphicles. [85]
        After his  family was killed during the truce, Heracles attacked and killed the brothers  at Cleonae in Argolis as they were traveling from Hyrmina in Eleia to Isthmus.  [86]
        It is said  that 360 Cleonaeans who had assisted Heracles were killed in the attack.  However, it is believed that the attack was carried out by a small group of  people, as legend has it that the brothers' mother, Molione, investigated the  perpetrators.[87]
        At that time,  Atreus, son of Pelops, the city's founder, lived in Cleonae.
        It is  believed that Atreus assisted Heracles, son of Alcmena, daughter of Eurydice  (or Lysidice), daughter of Pelops. [88]
      5.2  Dexamenus, likely the son of Phorbas
        There is no  tradition that Dexamenus was Phorbas' son. However, the following suggests that  he was Phorbas' son.
        1) The twin  sons of Phorbas' son, Actor, married Dexamenus' twin daughters. [89]
        In other  words, Dexamenus lived one generation after Phorbas.
        2) Dexamenus  ruled Olenus, the same place as Phorbas. [90]
      5.2.1  Eurypylus, son of Dexamenus
        Eurypylus  appears in the story of Heracles' expedition to Ilium. [91]
      5.2.2  Hipponus, likely the son of Dexamenus
        The 2nd-century  AD mythologist Apollodorus tells us that Oeneus of Calydon captured Olenus and  took Hipponus' daughter Periboea as a trophy. [92]
        This battle  is thought to have been one of the conflicts between Calydon and Pleuron, but  it is unlikely that Olenus of Achaia sided with Pleuron across the sea. This  Olenus was Olenus of Aetolia, located between Calydon and Pleuron. [93]
        In 1265 BC,  Hipponus migrated from Olenus of Achaia to Aetolia and founded Olenus. [94]
        Hipponous was  able to found a town near Pleuron through his aunt-in-law, Molione. [95]
        Molione was  the daughter of Molus, who lived in Pleuron. [96]
      6 Aeolus, likely  the son of Lapithes
        Aeolus is  presumed to be the son of Lapithes for the following reasons:
        1) Ormenus,  son of Cercaphus, son of Aeolus, and his son Amyntor were attacked and killed  by Heracles. [97]
        The battle  with Ormenus occurred during a battle between Heracles and the Lapiths, and  Ormenus was likely a member of the Lapiths.
        2) When creating a genealogy, the age difference between Aeolus  and Lapithes, the progenitor of the Lapiths, is only one generation.
        Therefore,  Aeolus is presumed to have been the son of Lapithes.
        Aeolus lived  near the Peneius River and had two sons, Cercaphus and Perieres, and two  daughters, Perimede and Pisidice. [98]
        Aeolus is  also presumed to have had a son named Melaneus. [99]
      6.1  Cercaphus, son of Aeolus
        In 1293 BC,  Cercaphus migrated from the Peneius River to Itonus and married Eupolemeia,  daughter of Myrmidon, from Phthia. Cercaphus and Eupolemeia had a son, Ormenus.  [100]
        Cercaphus  moved to Phthia due to the marriage of his sister Pisidice to Myrmidon. [101]
        Aethalides,  son of Eupolemeia, daughter of Myrmidon, joined the Argonauts' expedition from  near the Amphrysus River in Phthia.
        Aethalides  lived in Itonus and was Cercaphus's successor. [102]
      6.1.1  Aethalides, likely son of Cercaphus
        In 1268 BC,  Aethalides succeeded his father as Itonus and married Pelopia, daughter of  Pelias of Iolcus. Aethalides and Pelopia had a son, Cycnus (or Cygnus). [103]
        In 1227 BC,  Cycnus was attacked and killed by Heracles. [104]
      6.1.2 Ormenus  (or Ormenius), son of Cercaphus
        In 1236 BC,  the Minyans of Iolcus rebelled and destroyed the city. [105]
        In 1235 BC,  Ormenus migrated from Itonus to the east of Iolcus and founded Ormenion. [106]
        In 1227 BC,  Ormenus was attacked and killed by Heracles along with his son, Amyntor. [107]
        Ormenus had  two sons, Amyntor and Euaemon, and a daughter, Astydameia (or Astydamia).
      6.1.2.1  Amyntor, son of Ormenus
        In 1230 BC,  Amyntor's son, Phoenix, fled to Peleus, ruler of Phthia, due to a dispute  between father and son, and was given Dolopia. [108]
        Peleus was  the son of Aeacus, son of Actor, the brother of Eupolemeia, the mother of  Ormenus, the father of Amyntor, Phoenix's father. Thus, Peleus was a second  cousin of Amyntor, Phoenix's father.
        In 1227 BC,  Amyntor was killed along with his father, Ormenius, in a battle against  Heracles, who attacked Ormenion. [109]
        Phoenix led  the Trojan expedition as one of Achilles' five generals, commanding the fourth  legion. [110]
        After  returning from Troy, Phoenix accompanied Achilles' son Neoptolemus and died  near Thermopylae on the way to the new lands. [111]
      6.1.2.2  Euaemon, son of Ormenus
        Euaemon and  his son Eurypylus lived in Ormenion, where Eurypylus inherited it after his  uncle Amyntor died and his son Phoenix left the city. [112]
        In 1186 BC,  Eurypylus campaigned against Troy, but his hometown was taken by the  Thesprotians, and he settled in Patrae in Achaia. There is no link between  Eurypylus and Patrae, and it is possible that he chose his location based on an  oracle at Delphi, as tradition suggests. [113]
      6.2 Perieres,  son of Aeolus
        In 1310 BC,  Perieres emigrated from the Peneius River to Andania in Messenia, where he was  invited by the city's heirs to move. [114]
        Polycaon, son  of Lelex of Lacedaemon, founded Andania with the help of many people from  Argos, the homeland of his wife Messene. [115]
        Andania's  inhabitants were the Achaeans, who had recently migrated from Thessaly to the  area around Argos with the sons of Achaeus. [116]
        Andania was  an offshoot of Lacedaemon. However, the inhabitants began to call their region  Messenia, after Polycaon's wife Messene, rather than Lacedaemon. When  Polycaon's descendants died out, the inhabitants sought heirs not from  Lacedaemon but from Thessaly. [117]
        Perieres  married Gorgophone, daughter of Perseus, and had two sons, Aphareus and  Leucippus. [118]
      6.2.1  Aphareus, son of Perieres
        In 1280 BC,  Aphareus migrated from Andania to the west coast and founded Arene. Arene was  the daughter of Aphareus's mother, Gorgophon, from a second marriage. [119]
        Pausanias  reports that Aphareus' cousin Neleus fled from Iolcus in Thessaly and gave him  a portion of the coastal lands, including Pylus. [120]
        However,  Pausanias elsewhere writes that Neleus's Pylus was not in Messenia but near  Elis in Eleia. [121]
        Pausanias  also mistakenly identifies Perieres as the son of Aeolus, son of Hippotes.  Although Aphareus and Neleus were contemporaries, they likely never met.  Aphareus and Arene had two sons, Idas and Lynceus. [122]
      6.2.1.1 Idas,  son of Aphareus
        When Idas  reached adulthood, Tyndareus of Sparta visited Arene, seeking refuge with his  half-brother Aphareus. [123]
        Tyndareus  then moved to Aetolia to live with Thestius in Pleuron, and Idas followed him.  [124]
        In Pleuron,  Tyndareus married Thestius' daughter, Leda, and Idas married Evenus' daughter,  Marpessa. [125]
        Idas lived in  Aetolia until his daughter Cleopatra (or Halcyone) married Meleager, the son of  Oeneus of Calydon. Meanwhile, a conflict arose between Pleuron and Calydon,  with Tyndareus fighting for Pleuron and Idas for Calydon.
        After  Aphareus' death, Idas returned to Arene to succeed his father.[126]
        Tyndareus  then returned to Sparta with his two sons, Castor and Polydeuces (or  Pollux).[127]
        Tyndareus and  Idas carried the enmity between Pleuron and Calydon into the Peloponnesus,  leading to conflict between Laconia and Messenia. [128]
        First,  Tyndareus attacked Leucippus in Andania. Tyndareus's two sons, Castor and  Polydeuces, married of Leucippus's captured two daughters. [129]
        The attack on  Andania was likely motivated by the fact that the city was founded by Polycaon,  son of Lelex of Lacedaemon. [130]
        Next,  Tyndareus attacked Oechalia, near Andania, and expelled Melaneus' son Eurytus  from the city. [131]
        As Tyndareus  gradually expanded his power in Messenia, Idas abducted Tyndareus's daughter  Helen and entrusted her to Theseus in Athens. [132]
        Idas and  Theseus' friend Peirithus were of the same race, sharing a common ancestor,  Lapithes, son of Aeolus, the progenitor of the  Lapiths. It is likely that Idas and Theseus were also friends. [133]
        Tyndareus's  two sons rescued Helen. This incident escalated into a direct confrontation  between Idas's brothers and Tyndareus and his sons, resulting in their deaths.  [134]
      6.2.1.2  Lynceus, son of Aphareus
        No  information is known about Lynceus's wife and children. During a battle with  Tyndareus' sons, Lynceus was killed by Polydeuces. [135]
      
      6.2.2  Leucippus, son of Perieres
        Leucippus  inherited Andania after his brother Aphareus migrated to the coast and founded  Arene. [137]
        Leucippus had  three daughters: Hilaira (or Hilaeira), Phoebe, and Arsinoe. [138]
        Leucippus of  Andania was attacked by Tyndareus, and Hilaira and Phoebe were taken captive  and married to Tyndareus's two sons, Castor and Polydeuces. [139]
      6.3 Melaneus,  likely son of Aeolus
        The  6th-century BC philosopher Pherecydes attributes Melaneus's father to  Arcesilaus. However, the accompanying account contains many discrepancies with  other historical sources, making it unreliable. [140]
        Melaneus is  thought to be the son of Aeolus, son of Lapithes, and is thought to have lived  in the following places:
        In 1310 BC,  Melaneus founded Oechalia near Tricca.
        In 1305 BC,  Melaneus was invited by Perieres, who lived in Andania, to move to Messenia and  found Oechalia near Andania.
        Perieres and  Melaneus are thought to have been brothers. [141]
        Melaneus had  a son, Eurytus, with his wife, Oechalia (or Stratonica). [142]
        The reasons  why Melaneus is presumed to be the son of Aeolus are as follows:
        1) Melaneus'  son, Eurytus, was attacked and killed by Heracles. [143]
        The battle  between Heracles and Eurytus was the final battle in a series of battles  between Heracles and Lapiths. In other words, Melaneus was a member of the  Lapiths.
        2) When  constructing the genealogy, the age difference between Melaneus and Lapithes,  the progenitor of the Lapiths, spans two generations. In  other words, Melaneus is presumed to have been the grandson of Lapithes.
        3) Since  Melaneus was relied upon by Perieres, the son of Aeolus, the son of Lapithes,  he is likely to have been Perieres' brother.
        In  other words, Melaneus is presumed to be the son of Aeolus, son of the Lapiths.
      6.3.1  Eurytus, son of Melaneus
        Eurytus was  born in Oechalia, Messenia. He married Antiope, daughter of Pylo, from Nauplia  in Argolis, and had six sons: Iphitus, Clytius, Deioneus (or Didaeon),  Hippasus, Toxeus, Molion, and a daughter, Iole (or Iolea).
        In 1237 BC,  Eurytus was chased by Tyndareus, who had returned to Sparta from Aetolia, and  he moved to Euboea, where he founded Oechalia. [144]
        The ancient  name of Eretria in Euboea was Melaneis, reportedly named after Eurytus's  father, Melaneus. [145]
        Eurytus, who  migrated to Euboea, is believed to have founded Melaneis and then migrated  northeast and founded Oechalia.
        Lapiths then  expanded their power in Thessaly near the Peneius River and drove the  Aenianians from the Dotium plain. Moreover, the Lapiths  drove out the Perrhaebians who had settled in Gyrton and Larissa. Lapiths also pressed upon Histiaeotis, where the Dorians had  long resided and which was formerly called Doris. Heracles then assisted the Dorians in a battle with the  Lapiths. [146]
        A  considerable number of Lapiths were defeated by Heracles in Thessaly and driven  from their homes to seek refuge with Eurytus in Oechalia, Euboea. The battle in Euboea was the final battle between  Heracles and Lapiths, resulting in heavy casualties on both sides. Eurytus  himself was among those killed, along with his three sons.[147]
      6.3.1.1  Iphitus, son of Eurytus
        Iphitus was  reportedly killed by Heracles in Tiryns in an accident. [148]
        At the time,  Iphitus's father, Eurytus, was in Oechalia, Messenia, while Iphitus himself is  believed to have been in Nauplia, Argolis, his mother's birthplace. [149]
        Meanwhile,  Heracles lived in Tiryns, close to Nauplia, and is believed to have been on  friendly terms with Iphitus. Heracles repented and served under Omphale of  Lydia for three years. [150]
        At the time,  it was customary for anyone who accidentally killed someone to enter another  person's household and serve for a period of time. [151]
      6.3.1.2  Clytius, son of Eurytus
        Clytius is  said to have joined the Argonauts' expedition from Oechalia, Messenia, and was  killed by Aeetes. [152]
        However,  there is another more credible version that states he died in a battle with  Heracles at Oechalia in Euboea. [153]
      6.3.1.3  Deioneus (or Didaeon), son of Eurytus
        Deioneus  married Perigune, daughter of Sinis of Isthmus, who was the wife of Theseus of  Athens. [154]
        At the time  of this marriage, Deioneus likely lived in Oechalia in Messenia, but the  relationship between Deioneus and Theseus is unknown.
      6.3.1.4  Hippasus, son of Eurytus
        Hippasus  married Alcestis, daughter of Pelias of Iolcus, and had a son, Theseus. [155]
        After  Hippasus' death, his wife Alcestis remarried Admetus, son of Pheres of Pherae,  taking her son Theseus with her. [156]
        Theseus was  raised by Admetus but later lived near his grandfather, Eurytus, in Euboea.  [157]
      6.3.1.5  Eurytus' two sons, Toxeus and Molion
        Toxeus and  Molion, along with their father and brothers, died in battle defending Oechalia  in Euboea against Heracles. [158]
      7 Spread of  Lapiths Settlements
        In 1365 BC, the  Lapiths were born north of the Peneius River in northern Thessaly.
        In 1340 BC, the  Lapiths who lived north of the Peneius River migrated to Lesbos.
        In 1320 BC, the  Lapiths who lived north of the Peneius River migrated to Rhodes.
        In 1310 BC, the  Lapiths who lived north of the Peneius River migrated to Andania in Messenia.
        In 1310 BC,  the Lapiths who lived north of the Peneius River migrated upstream and founded  Oechalia.
        In 1306 BC,  the Lapiths who lived in Rhodes migrated to Olenus in Achaia.
        In 1305 BC,  the Lapiths who lived in Oechalia migrated to Messenia and founded Oechalia.
        In 1293 BC,  the Lapiths who lived north of the Peneius River migrated to Itonus on the west  coast of the Pagasetic Gulf.
        In 1285 BC,  the Lapiths who lived in Olenus in Achaia migrated to Eleia and founded  Hyrmina.
        In 1280 BC,  the Lapiths who lived in Andania migrated to the west coast of Messenia and  founded Arene.
        In 1280 BC, the Lapiths, who lived north of the Peneius  River, migrated to the east of the Peneius River and founded Gyrton.
        In 1265 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived in Olenus in Achaia, migrated to Aetolia and founded  Olenus.
        In 1260 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived north of the Peneius River, migrated to Tricca, upstream  of the Peneius River.
        In 1246 BC,  the Lapiths expanded their settlement around Mount Pelion.
        In 1243 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived in Oechalia, migrated near Gyrton and founded Mopsium.
        In 1237 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived in Oechalia in Messenia, migrated to Euboea and founded  Oechalia.
        In 1235 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived in Itonus, migrated east of Iolcus and founded Ormenion.
        In 1186 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived in Thessaly, migrated to Argolis, Pharae in Messenia,  Patrae in Achaia, Caria, and Colophon in Ionia.
        In 1111 BC,  the Lapiths, who lived in Thessaly, migrated to Athens.
      8 Greek Dark  Ages
        The Lapiths  lived in Athens, Argolis, Messenia, Colophon in Ionia, and Cos.
      End