The poet
Pindar tells the story, that when the gods drew lots for the places of the earth, Helios being absent received nothing. He complained to Zeus about it, who offered to make the division again. Helios refused, for he had seen a new island about to rise from the sea. So Helios, with
Zeus' consent, claimed a new island (Rhodes), which had not yet risen from the sea. And after it rose from the sea he lay with her and produced seven sons. According to another source, it was Helios himself who caused the water overflowing the island to disappear, and after that he named this island "Rhodes" after Rhodos. By Helios, Rhodos was the mother of the
Heliadae, who succeeded the Telchines as rulers of Rhodes. According to Pindar, Rhodos had, by Helios, seven sons. Pindar does not name the sons, but according to
Diodorus Siculus, the Heliadae were
Ochimus,
Cercaphus,
Actis, Macar (i.e.
Macareus),
Candalus,
Triopas, and
Tenages. Diodorus Siculus also says that Helios and Rhodos had one daughter,
Electryone. A scholion to Pindar gives the same list of sons, with Macareus (for Macar) and naming the last Heliadae as Phaethon, "the younger, whom the Rhodians call Tenages". The older Phaethon referred to here probably being the famous
Phaethon (whose story is told by
Ovid) who drove Helios' chariot. The scholion on
Odyssey 17.208 (perhaps drawing on either of the lost tragedies
Heliades (Daughters of Helios) by
Aeschylus, and
Phaethon, by
Euripides), also makes Rhodos the mother, by Helios, of this famous Phaethon, as well as three daughters:
Lampetie,
Aigle, and
Phaethousa. (In the
Odyssey, Lampetie and Phaethousa, the shepherds of Helios' cattle and sheep on
Thrinacia, are instead the daughters of Helios by
Neaera.) When
Aphrodite cursed Helios and made him fall in love with a mortal princess named
Leucothoe, he is said to have forgotten about Rhodos, among other lovers. == Culture ==