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Ares Enyalius was sometimes used as an epithet for Ares, though the name probably referred to a separate, Spartan god of war originally.
Homer calls Ares 'Enyalios' in Iliad book xx, and Aristophanes (in Peace), envisages Ares and Enyalios as separate gods of war.
In Argonautica book II, part xiv, Jason sets the chthonic earthborn warriors fighting among themselves by hurling a boulder in their midst:
The urbane Alexandrian author gives his old tale a touch of appropriate Homeric antiquity by using such an ancient epithet.
Plutarch, in Moralia (2nd century CE), tells of the bravery of the women of Argos, in the 5th century BCE, who repulsed the attacks of kings of Sparta. The survivors erected a temple to Ares Enyalius by the road where they fell: