1. A daughter of Cadmus, and wife of the Spartan Echion, by whom she became the mother of
Pentheus, who succeeded his grandfather Cadmus as king of Thebes. Agave was the sister of
Autonoe, Ino, and Semele (Apollod. 3.4.2), and when Semele,
during her pregnancy with Dionysus, was destroyed by the sight of the splendour of Zeus, her
sisters spread the report that she had only endeavoured to conceal her guilt, by pretending
that Zeus was the father of her child, and that her destruction was a just punishment for her
falsehood. This calumny was afterwards most severely avenged upon Agave. For, after Dionysus,
the son of Semele, had traversed the world, he came to Thebes and compelled the women to
celebrate his Dionysiac festivals on mount Cithaeron. Pentheus wishing to prevent
or stop these riotous proceedings, went himself to mount Cithaeron, but was torn to pieces
there by his own mother Agave, who in her frenzy believed him to be a wild beast. (Apollod. 3.5.2; Ov. Met. 3.725;
comp. PENTHEUS.) Hyginus (Hyg. Fab.
240, 254) makes Agave, after this deed, go to Illyria
and marry king Lycotherses, whom however she afterwards killed in order to gain his kingdom
for her father Cadmus. This account is manifestly transplaced by Hyginus, and must have
belonged to an earlier part of the story of Agave.