Pegasus
In Greek mythology, Pegasus was a winged horse that was the son of Poseidon.
Pegasus may also refer to:
Astronomy and Aerospace
- Pegasus (constellation), a northern constellation
- Pegasus rocket, a winged space booster developed by Orbital Sciences Corporation
- Pegasus satellite program, a series of three satellites
- Pegasus Dwarf Irregular Galaxy, or Peg DIG, a member of the Local Group of galaxies
- Pegasus Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy, or Pegasus II, a member of the Local Group of galaxies, a satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy
Computer Science
- Pegasus (computer), an early computer made by Ferranti
- Pegasus (Windows), a variation of Microsoft's Windows operating system for minimalistic computers and embedded systems
- Pegasus Mail, an email client for the DOS and Microsoft Windows operating systems
- Pegasus Software, a UK manufacturer of accounting software
Equestrianism
- Pegasus crossing, a type of pedestrian crossing in the United Kingdom which has a special consideration for horse riders
- Pegasus Stakes, a Grade III race for thoroughbred race horses held at Meadowlands Racetrack in October each year
Fiction
- Battlestar Pegasus, a ship featured in the Battlestar Galactica television programs
- Maximillion Pegasus, a character from the anime and manga series Yu-Gi-Oh!
- Pegasus (Disney), a fictional flying horse in Disney's animated film, Hercules
- Pegasus (Dungeons & Dragons), a magical beast in the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy roleplaying game
- Pegasus (rocking horse), the old rocking horse owned and cherished by Maud in Barbara Willard's The Richleighs of Tantamount
- Pegasus (Sailor Moon), a character in the anime and manga series Sailor Moon
- Pegasus (Space Odyssey), spaceship featured in the BBC drama documentary television series Space Odyssey: Voyage To The Planets
- Pegasus Seiya, the main character of the manga/anime, Saint Seiya
- Pegasus-class mobile suit carrier, a class of mobile suit carriers in the Gundam Universe
- Project Pegasus, a fictional scientific base in the Marvel Comics universe which has been the location of a variety of stories
- Pegasus Galaxy (Stargate), the setting of Stargate Atlantis, a fictionalized representation of one of the real-life galaxies named Pegasus
- Pegasus is the head of MI7 in Johnny English
Football
- Pegasus Athletic F.C., a football club based in England
- Pegasus F.C., an English amateur football club based in Oxford
- Pegasus Juniors F.C., a football club based in Hereford, England
Military
- HMH-463 - USMC CH-53 Sea Stallion squadron known as Pegasus
- HMS Pegasus - the name of a number of Royal Navy vessels
- Operation Pegasus
- Pegasus class hydrofoil, a series of fast attack patrol boats employed by the U.S. Navy
- USS Pegasus
- X-47 Pegasus, a demonstration Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle
- Pegasus Bridge, a bridge over the Caen Canal
- SLWH Pegasus, a heli-portable howitzer
Music
- "Pegasus" (song), an instrumental song written by Dickey Betts from The Allman Brothers Band's 1979 album Enlightened Rogues
- Pegasus Award, American music award
Television
- Pegasus Broadcasting Tower Cayey, a 332.5 m high guyed mast for TV transmission at Cayey, Puerto Rico
- "Pegasus" (Battlestar Galactica), an episode of the reimagined Battlestar Galactica television series
- "The Pegasus" (TNG episode), a seventh season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation
- "Letters from Pegasus" (Stargate Atlantis episode), a first season episode of Stargate Atlantis
- "The Pegasus Project" (Stargate SG-1 episode), a tenth season episode of Stargate SG-1
Transportation
- Aero Adventure Pegasus, a small civil utility aircraft currently under development in the United States for sale as a kitplane
- Bristol Pegasus, a British 9-cylinder one-row air-cooled radial engine
- HAI Pegasus, an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
- Pegasus (Hovercraft), a DIY Hovercraft
- Pegasus Airlines, an airline based in Istanbul, Turkey
- Pegasus blue ice runway, the farthest and least-used of McMurdo Station's three frozen airstrips
- Rolls-Royce Pegasus, a turbofan engine originally designed by Bristol and now manufactured by Rolls-Royce plc
- A car made by Pegasus Automobile GmbH in Germany.[1]
- Pegasus is the official armour-plated car of the British Prime Minister.
Other
- Pegasus (roller coaster), a wooden roller coaster located at Mount Olympus Water and Theme Park in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin
- Pegasus (Efteling), a wooden junior coaster in the Netherlands
- Pegasus Bay, New Zealand
- Pegasus Cup, a Cambridge rowing prize first awarded in 2006
- The Wild Pegasus, a French Canadian professional wrestler
- The academic logo of the University of Central Florida is a Pegasus.
See also
- Pigasus
- Flying horses, a disambiguation page
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Pegasus (disambiguation)"
Extended Definition: Pegasus
Pegasus
In Greek mythology, Pegasus (Greek: Πήγασος, Pégasos, 'strong') was a winged horse that was the son of Poseidon, in his role as horse-god, and the Gorgon Medusa.
Etymology
Hesiod connects the name Pegasos with the word for "spring, well", pēgē; everywhere the winged horse struck his hoof to the earth, an inspiring spring burst forth: one on the Muses' Mount Helicon, the Hippocrene ("horse spring"), at the behest of Poseidon to prevent the mountain swelling too much and another at Troezen. The actual etymology of the name is most likely from Luwian pihassas "lightning", or pihassasas, a weather god (the god of lightning). In Hesiod, Pegasos is still associated with this original significance by carrying the thunderbolts for Zeus.
Life
Birth
There are two versions of the winged stallion's birth and his brother the giant, Chrysaor:
- One is that they sprang from Medusa's neck as Perseus beheaded her, a "higher" birth, like the birth of Athena from the head of Zeus.
- Another says that they were born of the Earth as Medusa's blood spilled onto it, in which case Poseidon would not be their sire. A variation on this story holds that they were formed from the mingling of Medusa's blood and the sea foam, this including Poseidon in their making.
Bellerophon caught and tamed Pegasus, and presented him to the Muses at Mount Parnassus. After he became the horse of the Muses, he was at the service of the poets.
Adventures
Pegasus aided the hero Bellerophon (or in later versions Perseus) in his fight against both the Chimera and the Amazons. There are varying tales as to how Bellerophon found Pegasus; the most common says that the hero was told by Polyeidos to sleep in the temple of Athena, where the goddess visited him in the night and presented him with a golden bridle. The next morning, still clutching the bridle, he found Pegasus drinking at the Pierian spring. When the steed saw the bridle, he approached Bellerophon and allowed him to ride. Bellerophon slew the Chimaera on Pegasus' back, and then tried to ride the winged horse to the top of Mount Olympus to see the gods. However, Zeus sent down a gadfly to sting Pegasus, causing Bellerophon to fall all the way back to Earth[1] on the Plain of Aleion ("Wandering"), where he lived out his life in misery as a blinded cripple as punishment for trying to act as a god.
Afterward, Pegasus found sanctuary on the sacred mountain, where he carried Zeus' thunderbolts and was ridden by Eos, the goddess of dawn.
In his later life, Pegasus took a mate, Euippe (or Ocyrrhoe), and had two children Celeris and Melanippe. This family is the origin of the winged horses. Celeris is associated with the constellation Equuleus.
Death
Pegasus was not immortal. Because of his faithful service Zeus honored him with a constellation.[2] On the last day of his life, when Zeus transformed him into a constellation, a single feather fell to the earth near the city of Tarsus.[citation needed]
Modern day
In modern terminology, the word "pegasus" (plural "pegasi") has come to refer to any winged horse, though the term "pterippus" (meaning winged horse, plural "pterippi") is also used. Pegasus is also the symbol of the Mobil brand of gas and oil, marketed by the Exxon Mobil Corporation. As such, it has also been a symbol of Dallas, Texas, gracing its skyline atop the Magnolia building, since the 1930s. [1]
In psychoanalysis, Freud interpreted the creature as an expression of the primal scene.[citation needed]
Also, in the Disney movie Hercules, Hercules is depicted riding his old friend Pegasus. In the movie, it is shown that Zeus created Pegasus out of clouds and gave it to Hercules as a present when he was a baby.
World War II
During WW2, the silhouetted image of Bellerophon the warrior, mounted on the winged Pegasus, was adopted by the United Kingdom's newly-raised parachute troops in 1941 as their upper sleeve insignia. The image clearly symbolized a warrior arriving at a battle by air, the same tactics used by paratroopers. The square upper-sleeve insignia comprised Bellerophon/Pegasus in light blue on a maroon background. The insignia was designed by famous English novelist Daphne du Maurier, who was married to the commander of the British parachute forces (and later the expanded British Airborne Forces), General Frederick "Boy" Browning. The maroon background on the insignia was later used again by the Airborne Forces when they adopted the famous maroon beret in Summer 1942. The beret was the origin of the German nickname for British airborne troops, The Red Devils. Today's Parachute Regiment carries on the maroon beret tradition.
During the airborne phase of the Normandy invasion on the night of 5-6 June 1944, British 6th Airborne Division captured all its key objectives in advance of the seaborne assault, including the capture and holding at all costs of a vital bridge over the Caen Canal, near Ouistreham. In memory of their tenacity, the bridge has been known ever since as Pegasus Bridge.
Popular Culture
Pegasus is known for being the mascot of TriStar Pictures.
See also
- Arion (mythology)
- Buraq
- Chollima
- Sleipnir
- Luno The White Stallion
- Thestral
- Tulpar
References
- Parallels are in the myths of Icarus and Phaeton.
- Scott Littleton:"Mythology. The Illustrated Anthology of World Myth & Storytelling", p 147. Duncan Baird Publishers, London, 2002. ISBN 1-903296-37-4
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Pegasus"