From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Titormus
(
Greek: Τίτορμος) was a legendary shepherd of
Aetolia, famous in Antiquity for his victory over
Milo of Croton, who was in turn the most successful wrestler of Ancient
Olympics. The duel of Milo and Titormus, however, was not an ordinary wrestlers' competition: according to
Claudius Aelianus,
[1] rivals compared their strength in a wild Aetolian scenery, while lifting or throwing rocks, or catching bulls. Defeated, Milo praised his victor as "the second
Heracles". Titormus, considered the strongest man ever living, was believed to inhabit the most remote parts of peripheral Aetolia.
[2] From 5th century BC onwards, his legend served to strengthen Aetolia's ethnic identity.[3]
...
Milo received a bit more fame than Titormus...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milo_of_Croton
http://www.theoi.com/Text/Pausanias6A.html
...
It would seem that your hero isn't too famous these days. I studied Classical myth and I'd never heard of him myself. I looked him up on theoi.com and even they had never heard of him (though they do mention Milo of Croton). It could just be that he never got famous enough to have several statues built or reliefs made of himself and so records of him were lost (scholars could have found the name on the list of Olympic victors and so fudged a bit of his history...who knows). Most non-demigod heroes (those who weren't immortalized by becoming stars or becoming birds or flowers) had to just be written about or depicted in some kind of art to be remembered, that could have been the downfall with yours.
Or he could have just been a really reclusive hero. I'm sure if Hercules would have spent a little more time on his own, rather than out conquering and destroying, he wouldn't have had so much trouble (though there was, of course, always Hera to deal with).