A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology

Smith, William

A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology. William Smith, LLD, ed. 1890

Τρύλλος, (the elder son of Xenophon. When the war, which broke out between Elis and Arcadia, in B. C. 365, on the subject of the Triphylian towns, had rendered a residence at Scillus no longer safe, Gryllus and his brother Diodorus were sent by Xenophon to Lepreum for security. Here he himself soon after joined them, and went with them to Corinth. [XENOPHON.] Both the young men served with the Athenian cavalry at the battle of Mantineia, in B. C. 362, where Gryllus was slain fighting bravely. It was he, according to the account of the Athenians and Thebans, who gave Epaminondas his mortal wound, and he was represented in the act of inflicting it in a picture of the battle by Euphranor in the Cerameicus. The Mantineians also, though they ascribed the death of Fpaminondas to Machaerion, yet honoured Gryllus with a public funeral and an equestrian statue, and reverenced his memory, as the bravest of all who fought on their side at Mantineia. According to Diogenes Laertius, he was celebrated after his death in numberless epigrams and panegyrics. (D. L. 2.52_55; Xen. Hell. 7.4.12, Anab. 5.3.10, Ep. ad, Sot.; Diod. 15.77; Ael. VH 3.3; Plut. Ages. 35; Paus. 1.3, 8.9, 11, 9.15.)

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