| 4. Pheidas, | |
| 5. Stichius, | Il. xiii. 690, 1. |
| 6. Bias, |
| 7. Iasus, | |
| 8. Sphelus, | Il. xv. 332, 7, 8. |
| 9. Boucolus. |
Now the whole of these are commanders or officers; and yet four of them, Pheidas (φείδω), Stichius (στείχω), Sphelus (σφάλλω), and Boucolus (βούκολος), are in a marked manner of the Pelasgian class: Bias (βίη), may perhaps belong to it, as meaning mere physical force: and on the etymology of the ancient name Iasus I do not venture to speculate. Boucolus, like Boucolion, which we shall meet presently, deserves particular attention: we find nothing at all resembling it among the names which are (on other grounds) presumably Hellic.
Other names in the poems, which there may be some reason, from their local connection, to presume Pelasgian, are,
| 1. Lycoorgus, | From Il. vii. 136, 149, where they are described as Arcadians. | |
| 2. Ereuthalion, |
3. Dmetor, Lord of Cyprus, from Od. xvii. 443.
And perhaps we may add,
4. An Ion or Ian, as head of the Ἰάονες.
5. An Apis, the early eponymist of the Peloponnesus, or a part of it[554].
Now, though these are all rulers and great personages, the name Dmetor is the only one among them which seems in any degree to present Hellenic ideas: nor need that mean a subduer of men; it may as well mean simply a breaker of horses. Apis, we have every reason to suppose, means the ox. Lycoorgus, from Λυκὸς and ἔργον or its root, has all the appearance of being characteristically Pelasgian.