« Plut. Sert. 9 | Plut. Sert. 9 | Plut. Sert. 10 | About This Work »
4Now, the people of Tingis have a myth that after the death of Antaeus, his wife, Tinga, consorted with Heracles, and that Sophax was the fruit of this union, who became king of the country and named a city which he founded after his mother; also that Sophax had a son, Diodorus, to whom many of the Libyan peoples became subject, since he had a Greek army composed of the Olbians and Mycenaeans who were settled in those parts by Heracles.
« Plut. Sert. 9 | Plut. Sert. 9 | Plut. Sert. 10 | About This Work »