Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 30, 2026

Tremilus

In Greek mythology, Tremilus or Tremiles (Τρεμίλης) was the eponym of Tremile, which was later called Lycia. Another variant of his name was Termilus.

Last revised
Jun 30, 2026
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In Greek mythology, Tremilus (Ancient Greek: Τρέμιλος, romanizedTremilos) or Tremiles (Τρεμίλης) was the eponym of Tremile, which was later called Lycia. Another variant of his name was Termilus.

Family

Tremiles was married to the nymph Praxidice, daughter of Ogygus, on silver Sibros beside the whirling river. The couple had four sons: Tloos,1 Pinarus, Cragus and Xanthus. In one account, all sons were mentioned except Xanthus as the progeny of Tremiles and Praxidike.2

Mythology

When Tremiles died, Bellerophontes renamed the Tremileis Lycians. Hekataios refers to them as Tremilas in the 4th book of his Genealogies.3

Notes

Notes

  1. Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Tlōs
  2. Tituli Asiae Minoris 2.174, A.16–B2 (Greek text)
  3. Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Tremilē (quoting a poem by Panyassis)
References

References