In
Greek mythology, 'Laërtes' (
Greek: 'Λαέρτης') was the son of
Arcesius and
Chalcomedusa. He was father of
Odysseus (who was thus called Λαερτιάδης) and
Ctimene by his wife
Anticlea, daughter of the thief
Autolycus. Laërtes was an
Argonaut and participated in the hunt for the
Calydonian Boar. Laërtes' title was King of the
Cephallenians, which he presumably inherited from his father Arcesius and grandfather
Cephalus. His realm included
Ithaca and surrounding islands, and perhaps the neighboring part of the mainland.
Another version of the story says that he was not Odysseus' real father, and that
Sisyphus, who had seduced Anticlea, was.
[1]
After Odysseus and
Telemachus routed the suitors that had been threatening his wife,
Penelope, some of the suitors' surviving relatives confronted them.
Athena infused vigor into Laértes, so he could help Odysseus by killing
Eupeithes, father of
Antinous.
In
Robert Fitzgerald's
translation of the ''
Odyssey'',
Odysseus refers to him as 'King Allwoes'. (
Homer, ''
Odyssey'' XXIV;
Ovid, ''
Metamorphoses'' VIII, 315.)
See also
★ Laertes is a character in
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's novel ''
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship''.
★
Laertes was the name of a character in ''
Hamlet''.
References
1. Corinthian line URL accessed January 20, 2007.