The
Iliad lists the Caucones among the
Trojan allies. In Book X, the
Trojan herald
Dolon describes their homeland as "towards the sea" and mentions them alongside the
Carians,
Paionians,
Leleges, and
Pelasgians. In the
Odyssey (3.366),
Athena tells
Nestor at
Pylos that she will "go to the Caucones, where there's an old debt still owing me, not a small amount." This allusion may refer to a subgroup of Caucones who had migrated to mainland Greece, as reported by Strabo. Other references to the Caucones in epic tradition may have been attempts to recognize the Caucones as deserving a place in the
Neleiad kingdom in southwestern Greece. Efforts were made, we are told by Pausanias (4.1.5). to 'historicize'
Kaukon as the early ancestor of the Athenian
genos Lykomidai around 480 BC by inventing a grandson of an earth-born Phlyus named
Kaukon who taught the
Eleusinian Mysteries to a royal queen Messene. His name was
Kaukon, a teacher of religious rites. Their penetration beyond
Arcadia (Strabo 7.7.1–2) and their claims to be sons of
Lycaon or
Lycos (Apollodorus,
Library 3.8.1) explains their enduring presence over time in literature.
Pausanias' description of the carved figure of Caucon holding a
lyre atop his tomb speaks to their tribal poetic literacy. Several scholars believed
Pylian Caucones (Hdt. 4.148, 1.147, 5.65) brought Neleid legends and Nestor's polemic exhortations to
Colophon.
Mimnermus (fr. 9, 14–15, Strabo 14.1.3–4) their ancestor extended the traditional royal "we" of Homeric Nestor in his words of inspiration to
Smyrnaeans fighting
Lydian Gyges in the
Hermus plain (Paus. 4.21.2, quoted by
Theoclus, Paus. 5.8.7, 9.29.4). == Greek accounts ==