Laodice

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In Greek mythology, the name Laodice referred to different people but most importantly the wife of Telephus and the Queen of Mysia.

Contents

[edit] Laodice

[edit] Myth

[edit] The Murder of Helicaon

  • Fairest daughter of Priam of Troy and Hecuba, wife of Telephus, the son of Heracles. According to Apollodorus, after the destruction of Troy, she was "swallowed up by the earth." (Bibliotheca, 11.5.23); when Telephus came to fight the Greeks of and defend Troy as they set foot on Asia Minor Helicaon forced her to marry him and was going to drown there six year old son Eurypylus in Xanthos' Lake, but Telephus king of Mysia returned just in time. He decapitated his head and had his face engraved in all Mysian shields with the same expression of terror and fear in his eyes.

[edit] She abandons Helicaon for Telephus

Yet others say that that she had married Helicaon but when Telephus came she tricked him into believing that the cattle that was handed down to him by his father had been stolen and that she would exact his revenge if he would marry her. And so at night she stabbed him and married Telephus which explains why she was punished by being sucked up into a hell pit chasm in the earth.

[edit] The Rape of Laodice

Afterwards when the Greeks were attacking from the inside of the walls of Troy Acamas raped her and had his many warriors hold Telephus down so that he could do nothing to stop it and was forced to watch his wife scream and wail at her misfortune.

In Hellenistic history, too, many women bear this name, almost all of them related:

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