[5]
Now Hippocoon had sons, to wit: Dorycleus, Scaeus, Enarophorus, Eutiches, Bucolus,
Lycaethus, Tebrus, Hippothous, Eurytus, Hippocorystes, Alcinus, and Alcon.
With the help of these sons Hippocoon expelled Icarius and Tyndareus from Lacedaemon.1 They fled to Thestius and
allied themselves with him in the war which he waged with his neighbors; and Tyndareus
married Leda, daughter of Thestius. But afterwards, when Hercules slew Hippocoon and his
sons,2 they returned, and Tyndareus succeeded to the kingdom.
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1 As to the banishment of Tyndareus and his restoration by Herakles, see Diod. 4.33.5; Paus. 2.18.7; Paus. 3.1.4ff.; Paus. 3.21.4; Scholiast on Eur. Or. 457; Scholiast on Hom. Il. ii.581. According to the Scholiasts on Euripides and Homer, Icarius joined Hippocoon in driving his brother Tyndareus out of Sparta.
2 See above, Apollod. 2.7.3.
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