Enkhelyawon (Mycenaean Greek: ππππΊ, e-ke-rja-wo)[n 1] was possibly a Mycenaean king from Pylos in the 13th century BCE.
Enkhelyawon is known from Linear B records from Pylos.
He was very important and owned great estates, including good farm land, a thousand grapevines and a thousand fig trees; he also had forty men serving as rowers in the fleet.
[1] Because of this it is assumed that he was a king[1][2] - Mycenaean Greek: wanax; Linear B: π·ππ, wa-na-ka; later Greek: αΌΞ½Ξ±ΞΎ, anax - and that he ruled over Pylos.
But as kings are only mentioned by their title in texts of Linear B, it is not possible to conclusively prove this theory.