The Cypria mentions one Aganus, the child of Paris and Helen (Cypria fr. 12 PEG), a figure so obscure that even his name is uncertain: the accentual variant Aganós (instead of Áganos) has led critics to propose Agauós (Cobet) and Aglaós (Schwartz).
Dirty Love: The Genealogy of the Ancient Greek Novel, by Tim Whitmarsh (2018)
(delusional voice) so yk what Aglaos is also vaguely like?
Apollodorus' Library 3.12.5: When the babe was born Priam gave it to a servant to take and expose on Ida; now the servant was named Agelaus. Exposed by him, the infant was nursed for five days by a bear; and, when he found it safe, he took it up, carried it away, brought it up as his own son on his farm, and named him Paris.















