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Note: The text below is from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
ANCHISES, in Greek legend, Trojan hero, son of Capys and
Themis, grandson (according to Hyginus, son) of Assaracus,
connected on both sides with the royal family of Troy, was
king of Dardanus on Mt. Ida. Here Aphrodite met him and,
enamoured of his beauty, bore him Aeneas. For revealing the
name of the child's mother, in spite of the warnings of the
goddess, he was killed or struck blind by lightning (Hyginus,
Fab. 94). In the more recent legend, adopted by Virgil in
the Aeneid, he was conveyed out of Troy on the shoulders
of his son Aeneas, whose wanderings he followed as far as
Sicily, where he died and was buried on Mt. Eryx. On the other
hand, there was a grave on Mt. Ida at Troy pointed out as
his. From the name Assaracus, from the intercourse between
the Phoenicians and the early inhabitants of the Troad, and
from the connexion of Aphrodite, the protecting goddess of the
Phoenicians, with Anchises, it has been inferred that his family
was originally of Assyrian origin. His flight on the shoulders
of Aeneas is frequently represented on engraved gems of the
Roman period; and his visit from Aphrodite is rendered in a
beautiful bronze relief, engraved in Millingen's Unedited Gems.
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