Tmolus

For the butterfly genus, see Tmolus (butterfly).
Bozdağ (ancient Mount Tmolus) is associated with the accounts surrounding Tmolus

Tmolus /ˈmləs/ (Ancient Greek: Τμῶλος, Tmōlos) was a King of Lydia and husband to Omphale. He is the eponymous namesake of Mount Tmolus (modern Bozdağ), which lies in Lydia with the Lydian capital (later also called Sardis) at its foot and Hypaepa on its southern slope. In Greek mythology he figures as a mountain god, a son of Ares and Theogone and he judged the musical contest between Pan and Apollo.

When Tmolus was gored to death by a bull on the mountain that bears his name, his widow, Omphale, became Queen-regnant of Lydia. Through her, Lydian reign passed into the hands of the Tylonid (Heraclid) dynasty.

The geography of Tmolus and the contest between Pan and Apollo are mentioned in Ovid's Metamorphoses, XI.168.

This, or a different Tmolus, was, according to a scholion to Euripides Orestes 5, the father of Tantalus by Plouto.[1]

Notes

  1. Gantz, p. 536.

References

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