According to Euripides, Opheltes' parents were
Lycurgus, the priest of Zeus at
Nemea, and Euridice. However Hyginus' Latin text calls Opheltes' father "Lycus", rather than Lycurgus—probably an error—and here he is a king, rather than a priest. The Latin poet
Statius, following Euripides, has Lycurgus and Euridice as the parents of Opheltes, however for Statius, Lycurgus is both the king of Nemea, and the priest of Zeus. In agreement with Euripides,
Apollodorus also says that Opheltes, "afterwards called Archemorus", was the son of Lycurgus (his father being
Pheres, the son of
Cretheus) and Eurydice, adding "or, as some say, Amphithea", but like Hyginus, Apollodorus has Lycugus as king of Nemea. Scholia to
Pindar's
Nemean Odes, say that in
Aeschylus, Opheltes' mother is Nemea, presumably the eponymous nymph of Nemea. . Archaeological Museum of Nemea, TC 117. ==Story==