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Polydectes pretended to marry someone apart from Perseus`s mother Danae. Perseus was poor so he turned up to the wedding with no gift. Polydectes pretended to be angry and called Perseus good-for-nothing.Perseus was furious. "I can bring you any present in the world, anything." he said. To get rid of him Polydectes told Perseus to bring back the head of the gorgon Medusa. While Perseus was away Polydectes set out to marry Danae.
the constellation is called perseus.it is of this guy Perseus holding Medusa\'s head. (the person who had snakes for hair).
Perseus
Perseus Jackson
Clash of the Titans, both the original and the remake, has Medusa in it. Also the Hammer Studios movie The Gorgon. Percy Jackson and the Olympians also features the Medusa.
it has a flufy head look at the cut of the doors. cj5 has like a s-hape to it and the cj7 has a u-cut....i hope you can understand what i mean. -first_slice
Above Zeuse`s lair.
Michael. McClure has written: 'Fragments of Perseus' -- subject(s): Poetry, Perseus (Greek mythology) 'The mammals' 'Antechamber, & other poems' 'Gorf' -- subject(s): Protected DAISY 'Jaguar skies' 'Ghost tantras' 'On organism'
That he is killed by his own son is how King Arisius finally meets his fate according to ancient Greek mythology.Specifically, Argive King Acrisius consults the Delphic Oracle, who says that he will be killed by his own daughter's son. Acrisius therefore imprisons his daughter, Danaë, who nevertheless becomes pregnant with Zeus the chief god's son. Acrisius locks mother and child in a chest, which he has hurtled into the choppy sea. Danaë's son nevertheless survives and grows up to become the hero Perseus.According to one version, Perseus kills his father by accidentally hitting him in the head with a discus at the athletic games in Larissa. According to another version, Perseus kills Acrisius by showing him the head of the monstrous Medusa, whose view turns viewers into stone.
Sara Damiani has written: 'Medusa' -- subject(s): Medusa (Greek mythology), Art, Gorgons (Greek mythology), Medusa (Greek mythology) in literature, Gorgons (Greek mythology) in art, Gorgons (Greek mythology) in literature
The word here may be Medusa, a snake-tressed gorgon of Greek mythology. The name medusa is also applied to the free-swimming stage of marine cnidarians (jellyfish, stinging nettles).
I hate to break it to you but you can't find Medusa in real life because she's s myth but you could find her in books according to her legend or look it up on google.