Perseus

views updated Jun 27 2018

Perseus

Nationality/Culture

Greek/Roman

Pronunciation

PUR-see-uhs

Alternate Names

None

Appears In

Ovid's Metamorphoses, Hesiod's Theogony

Lineage

Son of Zeus and Danae

Character Overview

In Greek mythology, Perseus was the heroic slayer of the Gorgon Medusa (pronounced meh-DOO-suh). His mother was Danae (pronounced DAN-uh-ee), daughter of King Acrisius (pronounced uh-KRIZ-ee-uhs) of Argos. Before Perseus's birth, an oracle—or person who could communicate with the gods—predicted that Danae would bear a child who would one day kill his grandfather. Terrified by this prediction, Acrisius imprisoned his daughter in a tower. However, Danae received a visit in the tower from Zeus (pronounced ZOOS), the king of the gods, who had taken the form of a shower of gold, and she became pregnant with Zeus's child.

After Danaë gave birth to Perseus, Acrisius had his daughter and her child locked in a box, which he threw into the sea. The box came ashore on the island of Seriphos (pronounced SEHR-uh-fohs) and was found by Dictys (pronounced DIK-tis), a fisherman. Dictys sheltered Danaë and Perseus in his home, and they remained with him for many years.

When Perseus had grown into a young man, King Polydectes (pronounced pol-ee-DEK-teez) of Seriphos fell in love with Danaë and tried to persuade her to marry him. Danaë refused, and Perseus protected his mother from the king's unwanted advances. Hoping to rid himself of Perseus, Polydectes set him a seemingly impossible task: to obtain the head of Medusa, a monster so hideous that anyone who even glanced at her face turned to stone.

Perseus received gifts from the gods Hermes (pronounced HUR-meez) and Athena (pronounced uh-THEE-nuh) to help him in his task: a pair of winged sandals, an adamantine sword, a helmet that made the wearer invisible, and a bronze shield that was polished to shine like a mirror. Perseus then visited the Graeae (pronounced GREE-ee), three old hags who were sisters of the Gorgons and who shared a single eye. Seizing their eye, he demanded to know where he could find the Gorgons. When they told him, Perseus threw the eye into a lake so that the Graeae could not warn their sisters.

With the winged sandals, Perseus flew to the home of the Gorgons. When he reached their cave, he advanced toward Medusa using Athena's shield as a mirror to avoid looking directly at the monster. Then he took the sword and cut off Medusa's head, which he placed in a bag. Several drops of Medusa's blood touched the ground and changed into the winged horse Pegasus (pronounced PEG-uh-suhs). Wearing the helmet that made him invisible, Perseus flew off on Pegasus.

On his way home, Perseus came upon the giant, Atlas (pronounced AT-luhs), who held up the sky. Atlas tried to stop Perseus, but the hero took out the head of Medusa and turned the giant to stone. Next, Perseus saw a beautiful woman chained to a rock. This was Andromeda (pronounced an-DROM-i-duh), left as a sacrifice to a sea monster after her mother, Cassiopea (pronounced kas-ee-oh-PEE-uh), had boasted of her beauty and offended the sea god Poseidon (pronounced poh-SYE-dun). Perseus killed the sea monster, rescued Andromeda, and asked her to marry him.

Arriving back on the island of Seriphos, Perseus found that his mother had taken refuge in the temple of Athena to avoid the advances of Polydectes. Furious, Perseus used Medusa's head to turn Polydectes and his soldiers to stone. Perseus returned the winged sandals, helmet, and shield to the gods and gave the head of Medusa to Athena, who placed it on her shield. He then took Andromeda to Argos, the kingdom of his grandfather Acrisius.

Hearing that Perseus had arrived, Acrisius fled to a region of Greece known as Thessaly (pronounced THESS-uh-lee), mindful of the prophecy made years before. Later, however, Perseus took part in an athletic contest there and threw a discus—a heavy disc thrown for sport—that accidentally killed Acrisius. The prophecy was fulfilled.

Perseus in Context

The myth of Perseus is largely meant to warn ancient Greeks against trying to escape fate or the will of the gods. Perseus serves as an instrument of fate and the gods to carry out events in the human realm.

This reflects the ancient view that the gods were often not direct players in the affairs of humans, but acted indirectly to sway events. This helped to explain why gods were not seen interacting directly on a daily basis with humans.

Key Themes and Symbols

The intervention of the gods in the world of humans is an important theme in the story of Perseus. Zeus first intervenes by visiting Danaë in the form of a shower of gold and conceiving Perseus. Later, when Perseus is sent on an almost impossible mission to bring back the head of Medusa, Athena and Hermes intervene by providing him with weapons and armor. The inescapable nature of fate is also an important theme in the tale of Perseus. Acrisius tries to escape his fate on many occasions: he locks his daughter in a tower so she cannot have a child; after she has a son, Acrisius seals both mother and son in a box and sends them out to sea; and much later, when Acrisius discovers that Perseus is still alive, he flees to another region of Greece. In the end, Acrisius cannot escape his fate and is accidentally killed by his grandson during an athletic event.

Perseus in Art, Literature, and Everyday Life

Perseus was a popular hero in ancient Greek and Roman art, appearing frequently on pottery and in murals. He has been the subject of famous sculptures by Benvenuto Cellini, Antonio Canova, and Salvador Dali, and paintings by artists such as Piero di Cosimo and Edward Burne-Jones. In modern times, the myth of Perseus was used as the main storyline for the 1981 fantasy film Clash of the Titans, although some elements of the myth were changed. The actor who played Perseus in the movie, Harry Hamlin, also provided the voice of Perseus—this time portrayed as a villain—in the PlayStation 2 video game God of War II.

Read, Write, Think, Discuss

Legends about heroes often include tales about the slaying of great monsters or beasts, such as the sea monster Perseus defeats in order to save Andromeda. Although this theme is also found in stories today, modern heroes are often depicted fighting against human enemies, such as criminals. Why do you think older mythologies placed a strong emphasis on defeating beasts? Why do you think modern legends focus instead on human foes?

SEE ALSO Andromeda; Athena; Atlas; Danaë; Gorgons; Heroes; Medusa; Pegasus

Perseus

views updated May 18 2018

PERSEUS

(fi third cenrtury b.c. [?])

mathematics.

Perseus is known only from two passages in Proclus. In one passage his name is assciated with the incestigation if “Spiric” curves as that of Apollonius of Perga is with conies, Nicomedes with the conchoods, and Hippias of Elis with the quadratrices.1 In the second passage, derived from Gemintis, Proclus says that Perseus wrote an epigram upon his discovery, “Three lines upon five sections finding, Perseus made offering to the gods therefor.”2

In another place Proclus says that a spiric surface is thought of as generated by the revolution of a circle standing upright and turning about a fixed fixed point that is not its center; wherefore it comes about that there are three kinds of spiric surface according as the fixed point is on, inside, or outside the circumference.3 The spire surface is therefore what is known today as a “tore” in antiquity Hero of Alexandria gave it the name “Spire” or “ring.”4

These passages throw no light on the provenance of Perseus and leave wide room for conjecture about his dates. He must have lived before Geminus, as Proclus relies on that author; and it is probable before that the conic sections were advanced before the spiric curves were tackled. Perseus therefore probably lived between euclid Euclied and geminus say between 300 and 70 b.c., with a preference for the earlier date.

What Perseus actually discovered is also uncertain. In rather more precise language than that of Proclus, a spiric surface may be defined as the surface generated by a circle that revolves about a straight line (the axis of revolution) always remaining in a plane with it. There are three kinds of spiric surfaces, according as the axis of revoltution is outside the circle, tangential to it, or inside it (which are called by Proclus the “open,”, “continuous,” and “interlaced” and by Hero the “open”, continuous and “self-crossing”).

A spiric section on the analogy of a conic section would be a section of a spiric surface by a plane, which it is natural to assume is parallel to the axis in the first place. Proclus says that the sections are three in number corresponding to the three types of surface, but this is difficult it understand or to reconcile with the epigram. G. V. Schiaparelli showed how three different spiric curves could be obtained by a section of an open tore according as the plane of section was more or less distant from the axis of revolution,5 and Paul Tannery entered upon a closer mathematical analysis that led him to give a novel interpretation to the epigram.6 If r is the radius of the generating circle, a the distance of its center from the axis, and d the distance of the cutting plane from the axis, in the case of the open tore (for which a > r), the following five cases may be distinguished;

a + r > d > a (1)

d = a (2)

a > d > ar (3)

d = ar (4)

ar > d > 0 (5)

Of these the curve produced by (4) is Proclus’ first spiric curve, the “hippopede’ or “horse-fetter,” which is like a figure eight and had already been used by Eudoxus in his representation of planetary motion; (1) is Procls’ second broad in the middle; (3) is his third, narrow in the middel; (2) is a transition from (1)to (3); and (5) produces two symmetrical closed curves. If the tore is “Continous” (’closed” in modern terminolgy), a=r, hte forms (1),(2), and (3) remain as for the “open” tore, but (4) and (5) disapper and there is no new curve. If the tore is “interlaced” (“reentrant”) a.r. and the forms (4) and (5) do not exist; but there are three new curves corresponding to (1),(2),and (3), each with an oval inside it.

Tannery deduced that what the epigram means is that Perseus found three spiric curves in addition to the five sections. In this deduction he has been followed by most subsequent writiers, Loria even finding support in Dante.7 Although the interetation is not imposible, it putes a strain upon the Greek. It is simpler to suppose that Tannery has correctly identified the five sections, but that Perseus ignored (2) and (5) as not really giving new curves. Thus he found “three curves in five sections.” If we suppose that he took one of his curves from the five sections of the “open” tore, “Continuous”, and one from the sections of the “interlaced,” we could reconcile Prod us’ statement also, but it is simpler to suppose that Proclus writing centuries later, made an error.

NOTES

1. Proclus, In primum Euclidis, G. Fredlein, ed. (Leipzing, 1873; reper. Hildesheim, 1967), 356.6–12.

2.ibid pp. 11.23–112.2.

3.ibid p. 119.9–13.

4. Heron, Definitions 97, in J. L. Heiberg, ed., Heronis Alexandrini opera quae supersunt ominia iv (Leipzig, 1912), pp. 60.24–62.9.

5. G. V. Schiapaarelli, Le safere omocentriche di Eudosso, di Calippo e di Aristotele (Milan, 1875), pp. 32–34.

6. Paul Tannery, Mémoires scientifiques 11 (Toulouse-paris, 1912), pp. 26–28.

7. Gino Loria, Le scienze esatte nell’antica Grecia 2nd ed. (Milan, 1814), p. 417, n. 2.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

On Perseus or his works, see T. L. Health The Thirteen Books of Euclid’s 2nd ed. (Cambridge, 1926; repr. New York; 1956), I, 162–164; A History of Greek Mathemaics II (Oxford, 1921), 203–206; G. v.Schiaparelli, Le sfere omocentriche di Eudosso, di Calippo e di Aristotele (Milan, 1875), 32–34; and Paul Tannery, “Pour i’histoire des lines et de surfaces courbes dans I’antiquite,” in Bulletin des sciences mathematiques et astronomiques 2nd ser., 8 (Paris, 1884), 19–30; repr in Memoires secintifiques 2. (Toulouse-paris, 1912), 18–32.

Ivor Bulmer-Thomas

Perseus

views updated May 11 2018

Perseus

In Greek mythology, Perseus was the heroic slayer of the Gorgon Medusa* . His mother was Danaë, daughter of King Acrisius of Argos. Before Perseus's birth, an oracle predicted that Danaë would bear a child who would one day kill his grandfather. Terrified by this prophecy, Acrisius imprisoned his daughter in a tower. However, Danaë received a visit in the tower from Zeus* , who had taken the form of a shower of gold, and she became pregnant.

After Danaë gave birth to Perseus, Acrisius had his daughter and her child locked in a box, which he threw into the sea. The box came ashore on the island of Seriphos and was found by Dictys, a fisherman. Dictys sheltered Danaë and Perseus in his home, and they remained with him for many years.

When Perseus had grown into a young man, King Polydectes of Seriphos fell in love with Danaë and tried to persuade her to marry him. Danaë refused, and Perseus protected his mother from the unwanted advances. Hoping to rid himself of Perseus, Polydectes set him a seemingly impossible task. Perseus was to obtain the head of Medusa* , a monster so hideous that anyone who even glanced at her face turned to stone.

Perseus received gifts from the gods to help him in his task: a pair of winged sandals, a sword, a helmet that made the wearer invisible, and a bronze shield from Athena* that was polished to shine like a mirror. Perseus then visted the Graeae, three old hags who were sisters of the Gorgons and who shared a single eye. Seizing their eye, he demanded to know where he could find the Gorgons. When they told him, Perseus threw the eye into a lake so that the Graeae could not warn their sisters.

With the winged sandals, Perseus flew to the home of the Gorgons. When he reached their cave, he advanced toward Medusa using Athena's shield as a mirror to avoid looking directly at the monster. Then he took the sword and cut off Medusa's head, which he placed in a bag. Drops of Medusa's blood that touched the ground changed into the winged horse Pegasus. Wearing the helmet that made him invisible, Perseus flew off on Pegasus.

Gorgon one of three ugly monsters who had snakes for hair, staring eyes, and huge wings

oracle priest or priestess or other creature through whom a god is believed to speak; also the location (such as a shrine) where such words are spoken

prophecy foretelling of what is to come; also something that is predicted

nymph minor goddess of nature, usually represented as young and beautiful

On his way home, Perseus came upon the giant Atlas* , who held up the sky. Atlas tried to stop Perseus, but the hero took out the head of Medusa and turned the giant to stone. Next Perseus saw a beautiful woman chained to a rock. This was Andromeda, left as a sacrifice to a sea monster after her mother, Cassiopea, had boasted of her beauty and offended the sea nymphs known as the Nereids. Perseus killed the sea monster, rescued Andromeda, and asked her to marry him.

Arriving back in Seriphos, Perseus found that his mother had taken refuge in the temple of Athena to avoid the advances of Polydectes. Furious, Perseus used Medusa's head to turn Polydectes and his soldiers to stone. Perseus returned the winged sandals, helmet, and shield to the gods and gave the head of Medusa to Athena, who placed it on her shield. He then took Andromeda to Argos, the kingdom of his grandfather Acrisius.

discus heavy, circular plate hurled over distance as a sport

Hearing that Perseus had arrived, Acrisius fled to Thessaly, mindful of the prophecy made years before. Later, however, Perseus took part in an athletic contest there and threw a discus that accidentally killed Acrisius. The prophecy was fulfilled.

See also Andromeda ; ATHENA ; Atlas ; Cassiopea ; DANA ; GORGONS ; HEROES ; Medusa ; Pegasus .

Perseus

views updated May 29 2018

Perseus in Greek mythology, the son of Zeus and Danae, a hero celebrated for many achievements. Aided by gifts from the gods (a helmet which conferred invisibility from Pluto, wings for his feet from Hermes, and a mirror so that he could look indirectly at the gorgon from Athene) he cut off the head of the gorgon Medusa and gave it to Athene; riding the winged horse Pegasus which sprang from the gorgon's blood, he rescued and married Andromeda, and he became king of Tiryns in Greece.

A prophecy had said that he would kill his grandfather; this happened in Thessaly when his grandfather, who was attending some games there, was accidentally killed by a discus thrown by Perseus.

Perseus

views updated May 17 2018

Perseus In Greek mythology, son of Danaë and Zeus. Perseus beheaded the snake-haired gorgon Medusa, turned Atlas to stone and rescued the princess Andromeda from being sacrificed to a sea monster.

Perseus

views updated May 17 2018

Perseus

fl. second century b.c.

Greek mathematician known chiefly through Proclus's (410?-485) comments on his development of spiric surfaces and sections. A spiric surface, as defined by Proclus, is one in which a circle revolves around a straight line (the axis of revolution) but always remains in the same plane as the axis. Depending on whether the axis cuts the circle, is tangent to it, or is outside the circle, three distinct varieties of spiric surface are possible. (Visually these resemble an oval, a figure 8 with a broad waist, and a figure 8 with a narrow waist.) Proclus compared Perseus's work on spiric sections—formed when a plane parallel to the axis of revolution cuts the spiric surface—to Apollonius's (c. 262-c. 190 b.c.) studies of conics.

Perseus

views updated Jun 11 2018

Perseus In astronomy, a prominent northern constellation. Perseus is a rich constellation, crossed by the Milky Way.