Unlike his brother, Podalirius survived the war, and subsequently settled in
Caria. Accounts vary as to how he ended up there. According to one version, he returned to
Argos after the war but later went on to consult the
Delphian oracle about a preferable place for himself to live, and was instructed to stay at a place where he would suffer no harm should the sky fall; thus he chose the Carian peninsula which was surrounded by mountains.[6][7] Others relate that on the way back from Troy Podalirius' ship was blown off course so he landed in
Syrnus, Caria, where he settled.[8] In yet another version, he got shipwrecked near the Carian coast but was rescued by a shepherd named Bybassus, the
eponym-to-be of a city in Caria.[9] Podalirus could be the founder of Syrnus, which he became after the following series of events. Podalirius arrived at the court of the Carian king Damaethus and healed the king's daughter Syrna, who had fallen off a roof. In reward, Damaethus gave him Syrna in marriage and handed the power over the peninsula over to him. Podalirus founded two cities, one of which he named Syrnus after his wife and the other
Bybassus after the shepherd to whom he owed his life.[10]
According to
Strabo, a
heroön of Podalirius, and another of Calchas, were located in
Daunia, Italy, on a hill known as Drium. By the hero-shrine of Podalirius there flowed a stream believed to cure animals of any diseases.[11]Lycophron writes that Podalirius was buried in Italy near the
cenotaph of Calchas,[12] but
John Tzetzes accuses him of providing false information and defends the versions cited above.[7]
Stephanus of Byzantium, Stephani Byzantii Ethnicorum quae supersunt, edited by August Meineike (1790–1870), published 1849. A few entries from this important ancient handbook of place names have been translated by Brady Kiesling.
Online version at the Topos Text Project.