Answer:
Sarpedon, his son with Laodamia.
Explanation:
Homer's epic narrative "The Illiad" tells the famous war of "Battle of Troy" where Achilles killed Hektor and avenged the death of his close companion Patroclus. This epic revolves around the themes of loyalty, and also involved the gods and goddesses in the mortal war.
In Book XVI of the text, Sarpedon was leading the Trojans in their fights against the Greeks where he was killed by Patroclus. Zeus had wanted to save him from the way, knowing his fate and deciding "whether to catch him up out of the fight and set him down safe and sound in the fertile land of Lycia, or to let him now fall by the hand of the son of Menoetius". But his wife Hera told him not to do anything and just let it be as it is, for she believes that "some other of the gods will be also wanting to escort his son out of battle, for there are many sons of gods fighting round the city of Troy, and you will make every one jealous".