
thumb|Teuthras finds Auge on the Beach; from the Telephos frieze of the Pergamon Altar at the Antikensammlung/[[Pergamonmuseum in Berlin]] In Greek mythology, Teuthras (Ancient Greek: Τεύθρας, gen. Τεύθραντος) was a king of Mysia, and mythological eponym of the town of Teuthrania.
thumb|Teuthras finds Auge on the Beach; from the Telephos frieze of the Pergamon Altar at the Antikensammlung/[[Pergamonmuseum in Berlin]] In Greek mythology, Teuthras (Ancient Greek: Τεύθρας, gen. Τεύθραντος) was a king of Mysia, and mythological eponym of the town of Teuthrania.
== Family == In the Iliad, Teuthras is said to be the father of Axylus. Elsewhere, he has a son called Teuthranius with Auge. Both died fighting in the Trojan War.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).