Have you ever read any interesting historical facts about Greek Mythology? Well, first, Greek Mythology is an ancient myth within Greek Gods, Goddesses, and Magical Creatures. There are many Gods and Goddesses but, there are 12 main Olympians, major deities of the Greek pantheon. Second, Gods and Goddesses are super-human beings or spirits with powers of nature. Medusa is the magical creature I am going to do. Medusa has a family, people celebrated her death, and her appearance is incredibly unique. Paragraph #2: Medusa’s family is very interesting in a number of ways. Even though Medusa wasn't born a Gorgan, a fierce, frightening, or repulsive woman, she is considered one. Her parents, Phorcys and Keto, gave birth to the Gorgan sisters. Her parents were human, but when Keto gave birth, her sisters were nothing like humans. Her sisters, Stheno and Eryale, were born Gorgans. They acted more like Gorgans than Medusa did. Medusa was considered the most powerful of the three, even though she was human. She doesn't have any other family members. In conclusion, Medusa’s family is interesting. …show more content…
First, she swore to Athena to always be a virgin. When Medusa did that, Athena praised her. Medusa fell in love with Poseidon. Poseidon raped her, and she became pregnant. Athena found out and was really frustrated. She cursed Medusa so she would have snakes for hair, and turn people to stone when they look at her. She also had a dragon’s body. She begged Perseus to kill her, so he chopped of her head. Perseus gave her head to Athena, who was very pleased. In the end, Medusa has a very weird but, interesting
In the poem Perseus by Robert Hayden, Medusa is seen through the eyes of Perseus as he witnesses her daunting features. In the beginning of the poem, Medusa is asleep while the snakes that make up her hair are completely awake and ready to turn innocent people into stone. Further more, in order to prevent his death Perseus observes Medusa through his mirroring shield and is astounded by the image and has the strong urge to directly look at the being before him but is fighting the urge to do so, "Her sleeping head with its great gelid mass of serpents torpidly astir burned into the mirroring shield -- a scathing image dire as hated truth the mind accepts at last and festers on," (Hayden Lines 1-6). As a result of her infamous legacy Perseus
Also her appearance is different. In Perseus, “He came to the island of the Gorgons”(D’Aulaires 118). This shows that in this story that there are three sisters and they are called the Gorgon sisters. In Percy Jackson, they go to the “Gardening EMPORIO TIA EME.” This shows that the place that they found Medusa was a more modern type stone yard place. They way that they killed Medusa was different. In Perseus, “Perseus swooped down, and with one deft stroke he cut off the Medusa’s head.”(D’Aulaires 118) He went and just cut off his head and got it done with. In Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief, they had a whole big chase and running around the garden. Then finally, Percy was able to sneak up on her. “Heads up”. (Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief scene 14). Annabeth had driven the car and knocked Percy and Medusa on the ground and Percy came up behind her and cut off her head and said Heads
Now it depends Medusa’s Life As A Child Medusa’s life was not that bad. She was the daughter of 2 gods. She swore to Athena to be a
Medusa means "sovereign female wisdom." In Sanskrit it's Medha. Medusa was originally a Libyan Goddess, worshiped by The Amazons as their Serpent-Goddess. She was considered the destroyer aspect of the Great Triple Goddess also called Neith, Anath, Athene or Ath-enna in North Africa and Athana in 1400. BC Minoan Crete. She can also be connected to Africa where she had a hidden, dangerous face, and her hair was represented as resembling dread locks. Libyan Amazons believed that no one could possibly lift her veil, and that to look upon her face was to glimpse one's own death as she saw yours.
How she is using language, structure and form. Duffy presents Medusa as empowered by her transformation. She refuses to play the victim, weak and powerless. Instead she accepts her fate and becomes dangerous and dominate. She has been transformed into a gorgon a hideous creature but she directs her anger and aggression towards the reader.
Medea asserts her independence by “[making] Jason go far off, and made the household go far off, and told them not to look, not to profane her mysterious by watching” (Line 257-259), displaying that she has the right to her own privacy, although many believed that women should not be allowed their own private lives. In Ovid’s work, Medea is shown attempting and successfully killing Pelias by tricking his daughters into committing the crime. “And this she would have paid for, had not her dragon car been there to take her swift through high air” (Line 350), the notion that Medea had the cunningness to kill Pelias and escape defies what had people believed women were capable of. Later in Book 7, Medea is married to Aegeus and she wishes to kill Theseus. “When Aegeus noticed on his scabbard emblems familiar to him, and struck the death from his son’s lips, and once again Medea rode in a whirling cloud of magic darkness and out of reach of death.
In the myth Perseus tells the story of Medusa by Ovid the series of events leading up to how Medusa's head is cut off by Perseus and how Medusa becomes a monster is explained. In the myth, when Perseus decides to defeat Medusa, she is seen as a villain. On the contrary, when the story of how Medusa turns into a monster unfolds, she can be seen as a victim. When Perseus reaches Medusa's lair, he observes the victims of her powers and has the constant thought that he could lose his life and mission by simply looking into Medusa's eyes. She is seen as the villain when Perseus goes to Medusa's lair and successfully defeats her, but nonetheless Perseus is affected by Medusa's awe inspiring appearance, "Nevertheless, he had himself looked at the
Medusa was a murder victim. Medusa’s head was looked at as a treaured item, her eyes would turn people into stone. Perseus, Zeus’s son, a Greek hero, and a monster slayer was sent on a mission. Perseus’ mission was to chop Medusa’s head off to use her eyes to
To conclude, Medea’s actions can be seen an act of desperation from her side, as she realises that her functional life in Greece is practically over: she is a woman with no man, therefore no rights. Although through her barbaric background and natural cunningness, she forges a plan to escape this miserable prospect of her life, her actions, as terrible and inhumane as they are, empower her to free herself from her discriminating
Internal conflicts within Medea shed light on her true character and her difficulties to make decisions. Throughout the play, there are many cases of Medea contemplating her
Medusa was born in Ancient Greece, on October 31, 2111 B.C to Phorcys and Ceto. She graduated from Freaky Figurines High School, and received a degree in Awkward Effigy from Deceased Modeling of Greece University. Medusa is still drooling over the Sea God Poseidon (who she has no chance with whatsoever) that looks way better than her, which is obvious he doesn't have snakes for hair. She lived in Ancient Greece for her whole life with Poseidon tell they snuck into Athena’s castle. Which is the whole reason she was cursed along with her sisters who cursed her.
There are many different ways the story of Perseus and Medusa are told. One of the ways that is told is that, Acrisius was the king of Argos, the oracle of Delphi told the king that his daughter Danae’s son will one day kill him. Acrisius couldn’t let that happen. Acrisius was scared, so he deprived his daughter with any possible contact with outside world by, locking her in a bronze tower. The tower only had a small
Medea is the daughter of king Aeetes of the island Colchis and granddaughter of Helios, the God of Sun. Colchis was an island in the black sea, the Greeks believed that Greece was the centre of civilisation and that they were more superior than others, they also regarded Colchis as an island of barbarians - hence Medea’s barbaric nature.
Poseidon met a Nereid named Amphitrite; like her sister Thetis she proved a reluctant bride, but Poseidon finally was able to win her. As husband and wife they played roles very much like those enacted by Zeus and Hera; Poseidon has a weakness for women, and Amphitrite with good cause is angry and vengeful (1). Together they bore three children, Rhode, Triton, and Benthesicyme. Triton was a merman that consisted of human above the waist and fish-shaped below the waist. He is seen many a times blowing a conch shell and can change shape at will. Poseidon had an infatuation with Scylla, daughter of Phorcys, and this angered Amphitrite. Amphitrite changed Scylla into a barking monster with six heads and twelve feet by throwing magical herbs into her bathing pool (2). Poseidon fooled around with thousands of goddesses, nymphs, and mortal women in his lifetime and also married another important goddess. Medusa is best known for her snake covered hair and her evil glaze, but she was married to Poseidon also. She was a part of the Gorgons (three sisters whose hair was writhed with serpents). When Perseus beheaded her, she was pregnant. From her dead body sprang a winged horse, Pegasus, and a son, Chrysaor. Pegasus is best known of the two but Chrysaor is known as "he of the golden sword." Chrysaor wed Callirhië and they had two offspring, one of which was Echidna. Echidna wed Typhon and had four offspring Orthus,
Poseidon became infatuated with Medusa, he seduced her into the temple of Athena (goddess of wisdom). Because of this, Athena became infuriated and took her anger out on Medusa. She was so angry that she turned the maiden into a Gorgon, a terrifying female creature with hairs of venomous snakes and whose glance will turn a person to stone.