a king of Thrace, son of Neptune and Chione. He was thrown into the sea by his mother, who wished to conceal her shame from her father. Neptune saved his life and carried him into Ethiopia, where he was brought up by a woman, one of whose daughters he married. An act of violence to his litter-in-law obliged him to leave Ethiopia, and he fled to Thrace with his son Ismarus, where he married the daughter of Tegyrius the king of the country. This connection to the royal family rendered him ambitious; he conspired against his father-in-law, and fled, when the conspiracy was discovered, to Attica, where he was initiated in the mysteries of Ceres of Eleusis, and made hierophant or high priest. He was afterwards reconciled to Tegyrius, and inherited his kingdom. He made war against Erechtheus, king of Athens, who had appointed him to the office of high priest, and perished in battle about 1380 years before the Christian era. His descendants were also invested with the priesthood, which remained for about 1200 years in that family.