Nauplius, also called "Nauplius the Wrecker", was a king of
Euboea, and the father of
Palamedes. According to
Apollodorus, the son of Poseidon and Amymone, and the father of Palamedes are one person who "lived to a great age". Apollodorus reports that in the
Nostoi (
Returns), an early epic from the
Trojan cycle of poems about the
Trojan War, Nauplius' wife was
Philyra, and that according to
Cercops his wife was
Hesione, but that according to the "tragic poets" his wife was
Clymene. In addition to Palamedes, Nauplius had two other sons,
Oeax and
Nausimedon. There are three prominent stories associated with this Nauplius. Two of these stories involve Nauplius being called upon by two kings to dispose of their unwanted daughters. The third is the story of Nauplius' revenge for the unjust killing of Palamedes, by the Greeks during the
Trojan War.
Aerope and Clymene According to the tradition followed by
Euripides in his lost play
Cretan Women (
Kressai),
Catreus, the king of
Crete, found his daughter
Aerope in bed with a slave and handed her over to Nauplius to be drowned, but Nauplius spared Aerope's life and she married
Pleisthenes, who was the king of
Mycenae.
Sophocles, in his play
Ajax, may also refer to Aerope's father Catreus finding her in bed with some man, and handing her over to Nauplius to be drowned, but the possibly corrupt text may instead refer to Aerope's husband Atreus finding her in bed with Thyestes, and having her drowned. However, according to another tradition, known to Apollodorus, Catreus, because an oracle had said that he would be killed by one of his children, gave his daughters
Aerope and
Clymene to Nauplius to sell in a foreign land, but instead Nauplius gave Aerope to
Pleisthenes (as in Euripides) and himself took Clymene as his wife.
Auge A similar story to that of Aerope's, is that of
Auge, the daughter of
Aleus, king of
Tegea, and the mother of the hero
Telephus.
Sophocles wrote a tragedy
Aleadae (
The sons of Aleus), which told the story of Auge and Telephus. The play is lost and only fragments remain, but a declamation attributed to the fourth century BC orator
Alcidamas probably used Sophocles'
Aleadae for one of its sources. According to Alcidamas and others, Aleus discovered that Auge was pregnant and gave her to Nauplius to be drowned, but instead Nauplius sold her to the Mysian king
Teuthras.
Nauplius' revenge Nauplius' son Palamedes fought in the
Trojan War, but was killed by his fellow Greeks, as a result of
Odysseus' treachery. Nauplius went to Troy to demand justice for the death of his son, but met with no success. Consequently, Nauplius sought revenge against King
Agamemnon and the other Greek leaders. When Agamemnon's section of the Greek fleet was sailing home from Troy, they were caught in a great storm—the storm in which
Ajax the Lesser died—off the perilous southern coastline of
Euboea, at
Cape Caphereus, a notorious place which later became known by the name
Xylophagos ('Eater of Timber'). Taking advantage of the situation Nauplius lit beacon fires on the rocks, luring the Greek sailors to steer for the fires, thinking they marked a safe harbor, and many ships were shipwrecked as a result. Hyginus adds that Nauplius killed any Greeks who managed to swim ashore. Nauplius also somehow induced the wives of three of the Greek commanders to be unfaithful to their husbands: Agamemnon's wife
Clytemnestra with
Aegisthus,
Diomedes' wife
Aegiale with
Cometes, and
Idomeneus' wife
Meda with
Leucos. Oeax and Nausimedon were apparently killed by
Pylades as they arrived to aid Aegisthus. Nauplius also was said to have convinced Odysseus' mother
Anticleia that her son was dead, whereupon she hanged herself. According to
Plutarch, a location on Euboea was referred to as "the Young Men's Club" because when Nauplius came to
Chalcis as a suppliant, both being prosecuted by the Achaeans and charging against them, the city's people provided him with a guard of young men, which was stationed at this place. According to Apollodorus, the setting of false beacon fires was a habit of Nauplius, and he himself died in the same way.
Early sources Homer mentions the storm and the death of Ajax at the "great rocks of Gyrae" (
Odyssey 4.500) but nowhere mentions Palamedes or Nauplius' revenge. The location Gyrae is uncertain, though some later sources locate it near Cape Caphereus. However the
Nostoi probably did tell the story, since we know, from Apollodorus, that Nauplius was mentioned in the poem, and according to Proclus' summary of the
Nostoi the storm occurred at Cape Caphereus. The story of Palamedes death, and Nauplius' revenge was a popular one, by at least the fifth century BC. The tragedians
Aeschylus,
Sophocles and
Euripides all wrote plays which apparently dealt with the story. Each had a play titled
Palamedes. In addition, we know of two titles,
Nauplios Katapleon (
Nauplius Sails In) and
Nauplios Pyrkaeus (
Nauplius Lights a Fire), for plays attributed to Sophocles. Though these are possibly two names for the same play, they are probably two distinct plays. If so, then
Nauplios Katapleon might have dealt with either Nauplius' voyage to the Greek camp at Troy to demand justice for his son's death, or to his sail around Greece corrupting the Greek commanders' wives. In any case,
Nauplios Pyrkaeus, seems certainly to have been about "Nauplius the Wrecker" and his lighting false beacon fires. All of these plays are lost, and only testimonia and fragments remain. A fragment of Aeschylus'
Palamedes ("On account of what injury did you kill my son?") seems to assure that in that play, Nauplius came to Troy and protested his son's death. Sophocles has Nauplius give a speech in defense of Palamedes, listing his many inventions and discoveries, which much benefitted the Greek army. In Euripides'
Palamedes, Nauplius' son Oeax, who was with his brother Palamedes at Troy, decides to inform their father of the death of Palamedes, by inscribing the story on several oar-blades and casting them into the sea, in hopes that one would float back to Greece and be found by Nauplius. The attempt apparently succeeds and Nauplius comes to Troy. Several other plays also, presumably, dealt with this story.
Philocles, Aeschlyus' nephew and a contemporary of Euripides, wrote a play titled
Nauplius.
Nauplius, and
Palamedes, were the titles of two plays by the 4th century BC
Attic tragedian
Astydamas the Younger, And the 3rd century BC poet
Lycophron also wrote a play with the title
Nauplius. ==The Argonaut==