![]() The later discovery of his mark on cows in Autolycus’s herd proved that his neighbor was a thief. Some say he wrote the words “Stolen by Autolycus,” while others maintain he wrote only the letters “SS”. In an attempt to catch Autolycus in the act, Sisyphus secretly marked the inside of the hooves of his cattle. Sisyphus noticed that cattle were missing-and that the herd of Autolycus seemed to be expanding in number, but could not prove any theft. Horned cattle would lose their horns brown cattle would become white.Īutolycus repeatedly stole cattle from Sisyphus’s herd. But he always escaped detection because he could change the form or color of anything he stole. He would steal anything he could get his hands on. His ingenuity came in handy when Autolycus began grazing cattle near the herds of Sisyphus.Īutolycus was a notorious thief. Sisyphus, called “the craftiest of men” by Homer, was extraordinarily clever. The Cunningness of Sisyphus – Sisyphus and Autolycus For generations afterward, horses on Corinth seemed unusually skittish-haunted no doubt by the ghost of Glaucus. ![]() After losing a chariot race, his mares tore Glaucus to pieces and ate him on the spot. Having whetted their appetites for flesh, Glaucus unwittingly served them up a full meal. ![]() A renowned horseman, Glaucus fed his mares on human flesh. Glaucus would inherit the throne of Ephyra, but would suffer a gruesome fate. The couple would have three children: Glaucus, Ornytion, and Sinon. Sisyphus married Merope, the only one of the seven Pleiades (daughters of the Titan Atlas and Pleione) to have wedded a mortal rather than consorting with the gods. Some say that Sisyphus earned the crown by founding the city, which he populated with people grown out of mushrooms. The sorceress Medea gave Sisyphus the throne of Ephyra, later known as Corinth. Sisyphus and one of his brothers, Salmoneus, hated each other and Salmoneus took the throne of Thessaly from him.Įventually Sisyphus would become a king-but never of Thessaly. Sisyphus, the son of Aeolus, was born heir to the throne of Thessaly in central Greece. Sons: Glaucus, Thersander, Almus, Ornytion, Sinon.Father: Aeolus, king of Thessaly, was the father of Sisyphus.Sisyphus ultimately paid a heavy price for his trickery: The reprieve he gained through his cunning was brief the torture he suffered in the Underworld was eternal. But few have ever had the cunning of Sisyphus, the legendary rogue who cheated death not just once, but twice. ![]() If you could cheat death, would you? Most people would. The myth of Sisyphus is one of the most known myths in the Greek Mythology, due to the cunningness of Sisyphus and the punishment that was awaiting him. ![]()
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