thumb|260x260px|Hedylogos and Pothos (mythology)|Pothos are yoked to a chariot, behind which stands [[Aphrodite. Attic red figure cylindrical pyxis, , attributed to the Meidias Painter.]]
thumb|260x260px|Hedylogos and Pothos (mythology)|Pothos are yoked to a chariot, behind which stands [[Aphrodite. Attic red figure cylindrical pyxis, , attributed to the Meidias Painter.]]
Hedylogos () is one of the Erotes and a figure who commonly appears in ancient Greek vase paintings. A surviving example on a red-figure pyxis from the late 5th century BC shows Hedylogos, alongside his brother Pothos, drawing the chariot of Aphrodite. An oenochoe, originating from close to Thebes and dating to around 370 BC, also depicts him alongside Aphrodite.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).