Briefly, the two alternate lineages were: According to a scholiast on Homer's Iliad, Polyidus had two sons, Euchenor and Cleitus, by Eurydameia, daughter of Phyleus.
[5] One day, Glaucus, son of King Minos and Queen Pasiphaë of Crete, was playing with a mouse and suddenly disappeared.
Polyidus ( or Asclepius, god of medicine) observed the similarity to the ripening of the fruit of the mulberry, and Minos sent him to find Glaucus.
He also built the sanctuary of Dionysus Patroos (Paternal), and dedicated a wooden image that in Pausanias' day was covered up except the face, which alone was exposed.
[3] Polyidus also appears in one of the stories collected in Pseudo-Plutarch's On Rivers: he explains to Lysippe, mother of Teuthras, the source of her son's insanity.