Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 3, 2026

Exadius

In Greek mythology, Exadius was one of the Lapiths who attended the nuptial of their king Pirithous and his bride Hippodamia, and participated in the celebrated Centauromachy.

Last revised
Jun 3, 2026
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In Greek mythology, Exadius (Ancient Greek: Ἐξάδιος) was one of the Lapiths who attended the nuptial of their king Pirithous and his bride Hippodamia, and participated in the celebrated Centauromachy.1

Mythology

Exadius was a distinguished warrior during the contest between the Lapiths and the centaurs where he eventually killed the centaur Gryneus.2

Exadius threatened, 'You shall not escape! Let me but have a weapon!' And with that, he whirled the antlers of a votive stag, which he found there, hung on a tall pine-tree; and with that double-branching horn he pierced the eyes of Gryneus, and he gouged them out. One eye stuck to the horn; the other rolled down on his beard, to which it strictly clung in dreadful clotted gore.

— Ovid, Metamorphoses, 12.265-270

References

References

  1. Homer, Iliad 1.264; Hesiod, Shield of Heracles 180; Pausanias, 10.29.10; Ovid, Metamorphoses 12.266
  2. Ovid, Metamorphoses 12.265-270