Alex sends Maggie and her team to fight the baddies and Maggie is injured. Alex tends to her wounds and thanks her for helping her discover herself and find. Pausanias wrote that near the theatre in Argos stood a stone head of Medusa (somewhat ironic that the Gorgon's head was turned to stone), believed to have been made by the Cyclopes (Κύκλωπες, Kyklopes), a primordial race of giants (see Homer part 3), who served the gods as builders, blacksmiths and craftsmen. May 25, 2016 Fist of Medusa, part 2: Captain Tynel & Command Squad May 25, 2016 Iron Commander 25 Comments In September of last year, I completed the Command Squad for the army and wrote up a post, which you can find here. Part 2 Medusa Prequel. 2000 votes and 93541 views on Imgur: The magic of the Internet. Article by imgur. Greek Gods And Goddesses Greek Mythology.
Before I get to Medusa, perhaps I should speak more about her opposite, which I have already symbolized with the element of Gold. The illuminating light of life/god/etc is also personified as various personalites, and just for the heck of it, I’ll introduce Shamash. Shamash means 'Sun,' so it doesn’t get quite more literal than that. The central candle in a Hebrew candelabra, which is used to light the rest, is called Shamash. If you are familiar with “illuminati” symbolism then you may know that the cheif deity in their symbolism is often the Moon (or related symbols such as a left eye, thoth, a goddess, or even a severed head.). The temple at the top of the Tower of Babel ziggurat was dedicated to the moon god of the Babylonians, Sin/Nanna; whose name means Illuminator. The forces which we refer to as the “illuminati” use the powers of “darkness,” or secrecy, to conduct their great work. The moon, as the premire night-time star is obviously easily associated with the night/darkness/underworld or other force which overcomes the sun temporarily. Shamash (the sun) is actually spawned from Sin (the moon) in ancient mythology, and is dependent on the moon for his power. It seems contridictory, but as Wikipedia points out, the moon cults did precede sun cults. Another interesting factoid which will come up later when I talk about Venus briefly, is that Sin (the Moon) was depicted as an old man with a beard and was associated with the planet Venus. (Off topic: notice the moon was seen as a male deity? Strange and counter intuitive, as the sun and moon are usually seen as the symbolic king and queen. Here we have two kings, or perhaps two ‘queens.’)... a chthonic sea monster who dwelled in the ocean after the fourth Great Flood, an embodiment of the raging chaos before creation. Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca, in the form of serpents, tore her in half, throwing half upwards to create the sky and stars and leaving the other half to become the land of the earth. She remained alive, however, and demanded human blood.This deity has a male name, but is depicted as a female, usually in a birthing position. Tlaltecuhtli has some great characteristics which I think are very much connected to the archetypal symbology of Medusa. Medusa is a woman with very manly features, quite similar to Tlaltecuhtli as a woman with a man's name. Another thing that stands out is that Tlaltecuhtli was torn in half by two serpents.
...was thought to swallow the sun every night and regurgitate it back out in the morning. She was also thought to swallow the hearts of victims sacrificed to her, so it was common to carve images of her on the bottom of stone boxes in which the hearts and blood of sacrificial victims where placed after being ripped from their bodies.She has interesting vampiritic life-sucking traits which extends to the swallowing of the life-giving sun its self. She is also equivalent of Tiamat, a 'monstrous embodiment of primordial chaos,' and 'personified as a goddess,' as well as being seen as the constellation Cetus, a sea-monster.
The Tzitzimimeh were also associated with the stars and especially the stars that can be seen around the sun during a solar eclipse. This was interpreted as the Tzitzimimeh attacking the sun, this caused the belief that during a solar eclipse, the tzitzimime would descend to the earth and devour human beings.
In fact, no stretch at all is needed to establish the equation of flowing mane and serpent-dragon or chaos monster. The Aztec Tzonte-Mocque, identified with the planet Venus, and whose name Brasseur translated as 'mane,' was depicted as a dragon-like monster approaching the Earth in periods of eclipse or universal darkness. A counterpart of this chaos- or eclipse-demon is the Aztec Tzitzimitl, with 'madly disheveled hair,' descending upon a darkened world.The phrase 'madly disheveled hair' sounds quite reminicent of Medusa's slithering locks.