Taken from: http://westerncivilisationamaic.blogspot.com.au/2012/01/pelops-as-king-ahab.html
Pelops, Ahab and the
Achaeans
by
John R. Salverda
Elijah as Myrtilus
Myrtilus (a name suspiciously like another Hittite name of the same era, 'Mursilis'  TISHBITE in Hebrew "Tishbi" implying from the settlement of Teshub. There is a  play-on-words here. Tishbi uses the same letters that spell "Tashuv" i.e. return  or repent. Elijah exhorted the Israelites to repent. Coincidently, "Teshub" was  also the name of the chief god of the Hittites.) also was murdered, and in his  case it was said to be accusations, that were lodged against him by Hippodameia,  thus manipulating Pelops into committing the crime. This is the method employed  by the Biblical Ahab and Jezebel against Naboth, but Jezebel brought accusations  against, and called for the death of, someone else as well, one who was a bit  more like the Greek Myrtilus, the great prophet Elijah. The greatness of Elijah,  as portrayed in the Jewish literature, is not reflected in the mythological  figure of Myrtilus, but the myth is a biased version of the Scriptural story, as  told presumably, by the sons and followers of Ahab whom, we would not expect to  honor Elijah. Even so, the sons of Pelops had to admit that the 'traitor'  Myrtilus, did have some very Elijah-like attributes. The curse, for instance,  that Myrtilus proclaimed against the house of Pelops, turned out to be a true  prophecy. Myrtilus was acknowledged as a prophet, he was said to be one of 'the  sons of Hermes,' (Hermes, the serpent stick carrying messenger of god, has  elsewhere been identified as the Greek version of Moses, who in turn was  sometimes referred to as 'Nebo,' meaning the 'prophet.'http://www.britam.org/salverda/io.html ) Similarly Elijah, as many believe,  is supposed to have belonged to an organization that was called, 'the sons of  the prophets,' (2KI 4:1.) . 
'And there came a messenger, and told him, saying, They have brought the heads  of the king's sons. And he said, Lay ye them in two heaps at the entering in of  the gate until the morning.' (2KI 10:8) The Scriptural story about the 'heads'  is almost certainly true, and it must have had a lasting traumatic effect on the  psyche of those followers of Ahab who fled to Greece and told the tale of Pelops,  for this morbid display is attested to in the Greek myths as well. Oenomaus, the  myth relates, cut off the heads of those who dared to contest him in the chariot  chase and lost. These heads he exhibited on the gate of his palace and the story  specifically mentions the regret felt by Pelops upon seeing  the 'faces' on  display. (According to Hyginus, Fab. 84, when Pelops saw the heads of the  unsuccessful suitors nailed over the door, he started to regret his impudence.  He therefore appealed to Myrtilus, the charioteer of Oenomaus, promising half of  the kingdom if he would change his affiliation and collaborate with him.) Ahab's  corresponding regret, (appealing to Elijah, just as Pelops had appealed to  Myrtilus) famously portrayed in the Scriptures (1 Kings 21:17-29) as an act of  true repentance, resulted in a postponement of reckoning for his sin which would  be imposed instead upon his sons, the same sons whose heads made up the grisly  exhibition here referred to. It could be argued that Ahab himself did not  actually 'see' the heads, however this argument could be refuted by saying that  Ahab was afforded a 'vision' of the retribution visited upon his sons through  the Prophet ('seer') Elijah.
In the Scriptures, the heads were also displayed because of a lost chariot  chase, in this case it was Jehu (anointed by Elijah 1Kings 19:15,16) who  furiously drove his chariot on behalf of the Almighty to work out His revenge  for the death of Naboth. Jehu overtook his opponent's chariot piercing him  through the heart and that is why the heads were on display. These heads were  indeed the heads of the other suitors for the throne, the sons of Ahab. The  Biblical quote runs thusly; '' And Jehoram king of Israel and Ahaziah king of  Judah went out, each in his chariot, and they went out against Jehu, and met him  in the portion of Naboth the Jezreelite. ... And Jehu drew a bow with his full  strength, and smote Jehoram between his arms, and the arrow went out at his  heart, and he sunk down in his chariot. Then said Jehu ' Take up, and cast him  in the portion of the field of Naboth the Jezreelite: for ' Surely I have seen  yesterday the blood of Naboth, and the blood of his sons, saith THE ALMIGHTY;  and I will requite thee in this plat, saith THE ALMIGHTY. Now therefore take and  cast him into the plat of ground, according to the word of THE ALMIGHTY. But  when Ahaziah the king of Judah saw this, he fled ... And Jehu followed after  him, and said, Smite him also in the chariot.' (II Kings 9:21-28) The chariot  killing of Ahaziah the king of Judah and grandson of Ahab even more closely  parallels  the killing of the suitors by Oenomaus because, although it is  difficult to piece together the different accounts, (compare 2 Chron. 22 :7-9),  it is apparent that Ahaziah  fled and was captured by the men of Jehu, then Jehu  ordered Ahaziah to be placed in his chariot so that he could be killed in it,  then he was granted a head start. Ahaziah was mortally wounded as he fled to  Megiddo, where he died of his wounds, he was buried in Jerusalem. So it was a  kind of chase, as in the Greek myth.
Obviously the men of Ahab (the Achaeans) held Elijah (Myrtilus) in low esteem,  considering him to be a traitor. However Ahab, as was true of all Hittite  rulers,(in accordance with a known Hittite document restricting the absolute  power of Hittite kings, called the "Edict of Telipinus") did not have absolute  power (Jezebel, the daughter of a different kind of King, did not seem to  understand this.). He was required to justify his decisions to the royal clan  (comprised of princes, royal cousins, the priesthood, elders of the state, and  others of prestige). Elijah was highly respected and Ahab could not hate him  openly. When Elijah admonished Ahab, the King had to clearly and visibly display  his repentance, not just out of fear of the curse but also in order to maintain  the loyalty of the clan. Pelops as well is said to have regretted his treatment  of Myrtilus, and after the death of the seer, Pelops is said to have introduced  and enforced the worship of Hermes (the Greek Moses), the supposed father of  Myrtilus, among the Achaeans. Pelops built a few shrines to Hermes, and even  instituted some of the rites and rituals that were advocated by Hermes, such as  maintaining an ark which contained the fleece of the sacrificed  golden lamb  (indicating the lamb of god no doubt) the purpose of which was to justify the  Pelopid dynasty (an obvious parallel to the Mosaic Ark of the Covenant,  containing the Messianic promise and justifying the Davidic dynasty). And in  fact, there was a more honorable opinion of Myrtilus that was known to the  ancient Greeks. Pindar, and other early writers, say that it was Poseidon's gift  of the flying chariot that won the race for Pelops, not the treachery of the  seer Myrtilus. Pindar describes how god bestowed on Pelops a chariot with winged  steeds. 'Honoring him, the god gave him a golden chariot, and horses with  untiring wings. He overcame the might of Oenomaus, and took the girl as his  bride.' (Pindar, Olympian 1. 85) On a chest at Olympia the horses of Pelops in  the chariot race were represented with wings (Paus. 5.17.7). The earliest  mention of Myrtilus' treachery is to be found in the writings of Pherecydes in  the 5th century BC. and, at any rate, Myrtilus was respected by many and was not  unanimously despised even by the Achaeans (the men of Ahab).
It may be argued by some that Naboth was not like Oenomaus in that he is not  associated with driving a chariot, and that his death did not involve a chariot  race. True enough, for although the portion of the Scriptures that involves  Ahab, is full of chariotry, and Ahab is portrayed as "contesting" with Naboth  over his vineyard, the particular chapter of Naboth's murder does not involve a  chariot. However, that argument overlooks the fact that the foremost clash, and  overarching theme outlined in that section of the Scriptures is the contest  between the polytheism of Ahab against the Monotheism of Elijah and incidentally  of Naboth, whom Elijah had sided with against Ahab. The climax of this clash was  the contest at mount Carmel which culminated with a very famous chariot race  between Ahab and Elijah (in which Elijah miraculously succeeded although on  foot). A more careful reading of the Greek myth reveals that Oenomaus, the Greek  Naboth was not the driver of his own chariot he was merely riding along, and  that his chariot was actually driven by his charioteer Myrtilus, the Greek  Elijah, 'the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof.' Notice that Elijah is  referred to Scripturally as the "horseman of the chariot," not just a rider in  the chariot, but its' horseman. Thus it is not unreasonable to conclude that  Elijah was envisioned in his heavenly translation as not merely being picked up  by it, but rather that he was ensconced in the heavenly chariot as it's  charioteer. "And it came to pass, as they still went on, and talked, that,  behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them  both asunder; and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven. And Elisha saw it,  and he cried, My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen  thereof. And he saw him no more: and he took hold of his own clothes, and rent  them in two pieces." (2 Kings 2:11,12) Oddly Josephus himself seems to doubt the  story of the heavenly chariot, saying of Elijah only, that no one knows of his  death, "Now at this time it was that Elijah disappeared from among men, and no  one knows of his death to this very day; but he left behind him his disciple  Elisha, as we have formerly declared. And indeed, as to Elijah, and as to Enoch,  who was before the deluge, it is written in the sacred books that they  disappeared, but so that nobody knew that they died." (Antiquities, 9). At any  rate it does seem reasonable for some to blame (or credit as the source my be)  Jezebel, who called for his death and caused his exile, for his "disappearance."
After the chariot/foot race from Mount Carmel of Ahab and Elijah, Jezebel called  for the immediate death of Elijah. Elijah himself prayed for his own death at  that time (never-the-less the Scriptures have Elijah out living Ahab). Likewise  the death of the seer Myrtilus was called for by Hippodameia. In both cases the  last day of the great prophet/seer was spent in a flying chariot supplied by  God/god. However in the myth told by the Achaeans the flying chariot was  supplied to Pelops and it was he who invited the seer to take a ride in it. As  they were flying high in the heavens Pelops killed Myrtilus by Kicking him out.
The prophecies of Myrtilus continued to come true for generations after his  earthly departure. Like Elijah, Myrtilus did not lose consciousness after death,  he even, again like Elijah, came back occasionally to preside over the death of  the cursed dynasty, especially royal chariot deaths, for as some say, that the  ghost of Myrtilus was the 'horse scarer' in the Hippodrome at Olympia. Myrtilus,  also like Elijah, was translated into heaven at his death, where he was placed  in the heavenly chariot which is known to this very day as the constellation  called, 'Auriga,' or as we say, 'the charioteer.' Here perhaps, the Greek myth  has a more 'logical' explanation for the story of Elijah's apotheosis and the  fiery chariot of the Heavenly God.
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