, now in the
British Museum. Only two
sanctuaries to Protesilaus are attested. There was a shrine of Protesilaus at
Phylace, his home in Thessaly, where his widow was left lacerating her cheeks in mourning him, and games were organised there in his honour,
Pindar noted. The tomb of Protesilaus at
Elaeus in the
Thracian Chersonese is documented in the 5th century BCE, when, during the
Persian War, votive treasure deposited at his tomb was plundered by the satrap Artayctes, under permission from
Xerxes. The Greeks later captured and executed Artayctes, returning the treasure. The tomb was mentioned again when
Alexander the Great arrived at Elaeus on his campaign against the
Persian Empire. He offered a sacrifice on the tomb, hoping to avoid the fate of Protesilaus when he arrived in Asia. Like Protesilaus before him, Alexander was the first to set foot on Asian soil during his campaign.
Philostratus writing of this temple in the early 3rd century CE, speaks of a
cult statue of Protesilaus at this temple "standing on a base which was shaped like the prow of a boat." Coins of Elaeus from the time of
Commodus with Protesilaus on the prow of a ship, in helmet,
cuirass and short
chiton on the reverse probably depict this statue.
Strabo also mentions the sanctuary. A founder-cult of Protesilaus at Scione, in
Pallene, Chalcidice, was given an
etiology by the Greek grammarian and mythographer of the Augustan-era
Conon that is at variance with the
epic tradition. In this, Conon asserts that Protesilaus survived the Trojan War and was returning with Priam's sister Aethilla as his captive. When the ships go ashore for water on the coast of Pallene, between Scione and Mende, Aethilla persuaded the other Trojan women to burn the ships, forcing Protesilaus to remain and found the city of Scione. A rare tetradrachm of Scione ca. 480 BCE acquired by the
British Museum depicts Protesilaus, identified by the retrograde legend PROTESLAS. Protesilaus, speaking from beyond the grave, is the oracular source of the corrected eye-witness version of the actions of heroes at Troy, related by a "vine-dresser" to a Phoenician merchant in the
framing device that gives an air of authenticity to the narratives of
Philostratus's
Heroicus, a late literary representation of
Greek hero-cult traditions that developed independently of the epic tradition. ==Cultural depictions==