situla by the Lycurgus Painter, c. 360 BCRhesus was raised by fountain
nymphs and died without engaging in battle. Due to Thrace being attacked by
Scythia, Rhesus led his army to Troy later than the other allied armies.
Dolon, who had gone out to spy on Agamemnon’s army for Hector, was caught by Diomedes and Odysseus and proceeded to tell the two about the new arrival of the Thracians. Dolon explained that Rhesus had the finest horses, as well as huge, golden armor that was suitable for gods rather than mortals. While the Thracians were sleeping, Diomedes and Odysseus infiltrated the camp in the dead of night, killing a number of Thracians and Rhesus in his tent while also stealing his famous steeds. The event portrayed in the
Iliad also provides the action of the play
Rhesus, transmitted among the plays of
Euripides. The mother of Rhesus, one of the nine
Muses, then arrived and laid blame on all those responsible: Odysseus, Diomedes, and Athena. She also announced the imminent resurrection of Rhesus, who will become immortal but will be sent to stay in a cave.
Scholia to the
Iliad episode and the
Rhesus agree in giving Rhesus a more heroic stature, incompatible with Homer's version. Rhesus is also named as one of the eight rivers that Poseidon raged from Mount Ida to the sea in order to knock down the wall that the Achaeans built. There was also a river in
Bithynia named Rhesus, with Greek myth providing an attendant river god of the same name. Rhesus the Thracian king was himself associated with Bithynia through his love with the Bithynian huntress
Arganthone, in the
Erotika Pathemata ["Sufferings for Love"] by
Parthenius of Nicaea, chapter 36. ==Namesake==