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         Perseus:     more books (100)
  1. Perseus The Gorgon Slayer (1883) by William John Gordon, 2010-05-23
  2. Graphic Myths: Perseus and Medusa
  3. Perseus or of Dragons by H. F. Scott Stokes, 2010-09-10
  4. Perseus The Champion by William Tyler Olcott, 2006-09-15
  5. Perseus 1.0: Interactive Sources and Studies on Ancient Greece for Macintosh computers
  6. Perseus with the Hesperides by Byran Charles Waller, 2010-09-04
  7. Perseus 1.0 : Interactive Sources and Studies on Ancient Greece : User's Guide by Gregory (ed.) Crane, 1992
  8. The Shield of Perseus: The Vision and Imagination of Howard Nemerov by Julia A. Bartholomay, 1972-06
  9. Perseus König von Makedonien und Lucius Ameilius Paulus by Franz Dorotheus Gerlach, 2009-09-22
  10. Perseus: And Other Essays In Verse (1882) by T. Alderson Wilson, 2010-09-10
  11. Perseus: A Study in Greek Art and Legend by Jocelyn M. Woodward, 1937-06
  12. The Greek Fairy Tale Of Perseus by Charles Kingsley, 2010-05-23
  13. Perseus Middleman: Thaumaturgic Adventurer by Paul Elliot, 2007-04-18
  14. Perseus and Andromeda: Teacher's Boook by Jenny Dooley, 2000-07-01

61. Encyclopedia Of Greek Mythology: Perseus
Index perseus (PURsee-us or PURS-yoos). Son of Zeus, heroic vanquisher of the Gorgon Medusa. Also see The Illustrated perseus. Another picture.
http://www.mythweb.com/encyc/entries/perseus.html
Search Home Index
Perseus (PUR-see-us or PURS-yoos) Son of Zeus, heroic vanquisher of the Gorgon Medusa. Also see The Illustrated Perseus Another picture King Acrisius of Argos was warned by an oracle that he would be killed in time by a son born to his daughter Danae. So he promptly locked Danae up in a tower and threw away the key. But the god Zeus got in, disguised as a shower of gold, with the result that Perseus was born. So Acrisius straightaway stuck daughter and infant into a brazen chest and pushed it out to sea. Perhaps he expected it to sink like a stone, but instead it floated quite nicely, fetching up on a beach on the island of Seriphos. Here a fisherman named Dictys came upon the unusual bit of flotsam and adopted a protective attitude toward its contents. Thus Perseus had the advantage of a pure and simple role model as he grew to young manhood. Then one day Dictys's brother, who happened to be king in those parts, took a fancy to Danae and pressed his attentions upon her. "You leave my mother alone," insisted Perseus, clenching a not-insubstantial fist. And the king, Polydectes by name, had no choice but to desist. Or, rather, he grew subtle in the means of achieving his desires.

62. The Perseus Project And Beyond How Building A Digital Library
ISSN 10829873. The perseus Project and Beyond. Work at the perseus Project. At present, our funded work is advancing along the following complementary paths.
http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january98/01crane.html
D-Lib Magazine
January 1998
ISSN 1082-9873 The Perseus Project and Beyond
How Building a Digital Library Challenges the Humanities and Technology
Gregory Crane
Editor-in-Chief
Associate Professor of Classics
Tufts University
Medford, Massachusetts
gcrane@tufts.edu
For more than ten years, the Perseus Project has been developing a digital library in the humanities. Initial work concentrated exclusively on ancient Greek culture, using this domain as a case study for a compact, densely hypertextual library on a single, but interdisciplinary, subject. Since it has achieved its initial goals with the Greek materials, however, Perseus is using the existing library to study the new possibilities (and limitations) of the electronic medium and to serve as the foundation for work in new cultural domains: Perseus has begun coverage of Roman and now Renaissance materials, with plans for expansion into other areas of the humanities as well. Our goal is not only to help traditional scholars conduct their research more effectively but, more importantly, to help humanists use the technology to redefine the relationship between their work and the broader intellectual community.
Introduction
The Perseus Project is a digital library that has been under continuous development since the spring of 1987.

63. Perseus
perseus. Once there was a king named Acrisius, he had a beautiful daughter named Danae. perseus grew up to become a strong young man.
http://www.greekmythology.com/Myths/Heroes/Perseus/perseus.html
Perseus Once there was a king named Acrisius, he had a beautiful daughter named Danae. The oracle of Apollo told Acrisius that Danae's son would one day kill him. Acrisius could not let that happen, so he locked Danae in a bronze tower so that she would never marry or have children. The tower had no doors, but it had one very small window. Danae was very sad, but one day a bright shower of gold came through the small window. A man appeared, he had a thunderbolt in his hand and Danae knew he was a god, but she didn't know which. The man said, "Yes, I am a god and I wish to make you my wife. I can make this dark prison a wonderful sunny land with many flowers " All happened as he said, the horrible prison became fields almost as wonderful as the Elysian Fields themselves, but one day Acrisius saw light coming out of the small window. He told his men to tear down one of the walls. He walked into the tower and saw Danae with a baby on her lap, smiling she said, "I have named him Perseus." Acrisius was furious, he shut Danae and baby Perseus up in a large chest and cast them out to sea. Somehow they got safely to the island of Seriphos where Polydectes was king. The kings brother who was a fisherman, caught them in his net and pulled them to shore, his name was Dictys. Perseus grew up to become a strong young man. Polydectes heard about Danae and wanted her to marry him, but she rejected him. Polydectes would have married Danae by force if Perseus wasn't there to protect her.

64. M. Tullius Cicero, Orations: Three Orations On The Agrarian Law, The Four Agains
English translation by Yonge
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/text?lookup=cic. tul. init.

65. Adventures Of Perseus
Adventures of perseus. The adventures of perseus are very interesting. Let s start with a little bit of history. perseus was the son of God Zeus and Danae.
http://www.greekmythology.com/Myths/The_Myths/Perseus/perseus.html
Adventures of Perseus The adventures of Perseus are very interesting. in fact, his whole life is interesting from his birth onwards. Let's start with a little bit of history. Perseus was the son of God Zeus and Danae. His reputation quickly made him into a hero of Argos (an area in the peloponissus part of Greece). Arcisius, Perseus' grandfather once asked an oracle if he would ever have any kids. The answer he got was shocking and lead him to live a life of paranoia. He was told by the oracle that his daughter would have a son that will eventually kill him. Arcisius being driven by the force of fear made a quick decision, a quick decision that would impact another forever. He had his daughter Danae jailed in an underground cave with brass walls.
But mighty Zeus was watching. He had an eye for beauty, and a way with women few dared to compete, not even Pierce Brosnan. Zeus transformed himself into a shower of golden rain and entered the cave were Danae was held. They then formed union, and Danae gave birth to a baby boy, of which she managed to keep secret for some time.
Sooner than later, her angry father Arcisius found out about the baby. He refused to believe that Zeus had anything to do with it (blame it on the milk man:)). He ordered Danae's nurse to death, as he believed that she orchestrated this affair. He thought about killing his grandson himself, what his guilt would not allow hi to. He walked back and forth with his head struck down from his shoulders desperately seeking a solution that wouldn't pose any danger to his life. By early morning, Arcisius made up his mind. he had a wooden ark built for his daughter and his grandson. he immiadetly gave the order for the two to be placed in it and to be set adrift on the sea, as far as possible. Finally, he's worries were gone. Or so he thought.

66. North's Plutarch
A few biographies of ancient Roman and Greek heroes from J. W. Skeat's 19th century edition of Sir Thomas North's 1579 English edition. The North edition was a Renaissance bestseller in England, and Shakespeare borrowed heavily from it for his plays. Provided by the perseus Project at Tufts University.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/JC/plutarch.north.html
Plutarch's Parallel Lives You will find here Sir Thomas North's 1579 English translation of Plutarch's Parallel Lives classical biographies of ancient Roman and Greek men that incorporate innovative and subtle analyses of individual character. North's version of Plutarch's Lives was Shakespeare's primary source for his play Julius Caesar. We have used here J. W. Skeat's nineteenth century edition of North's Plutarch that selects several of the major Lives. Bust of Pompey, Copenhagen NCG 597
Photo courtesy of Amy C. Smith
  • The Life of Caius Martius Coriolanus
  • The Life of Julius Caesar
  • The Life of Marcus Brutus
  • The Life of Marcus Antonius ... Return to Julius Caesar Homepage.
  • 67. PERSEUS - Merchant Bank And Private Equity Fund Management
    perseus, LLC is a merchant bank and private equity fund management company with offices in Washington, DC and New York City. perseus, llc.
    http://www.perseusllc.com/
    click on
    image to

    enter website

    Over the centuries, images of Perseus have reflected not only the tenor of the times in which they were made, but also variations in different telling of the myth. Here Perseus appears as a classically-inspired, yet clearly Renaissance figure. He holds a sword, rather than the sickle of Hermes, as described in most classical sources.
    Perseus and Medusa, 1545-54 Benvenuto Cellini (1500-1572) Bronze h. 320 cm Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence Commissioned by Duke Cosimo de' Medici Beebe Communications, Inc. Photo credits: Bridgeman Art Library and Art Resource.

    68. Witamy Na Stronie Firmy PERSEUS - Www.perseus.com.pl
    www.perseus.com.pl Firma perseus zajmujaca sie tworzeniem oprogramowania FinansoKsiegowego. perseus Spólka z oo ul. Grzybowska 77 lok. 227 00-844 Warszawa.
    http://www.perseus.com.pl/
    Perseus Spó³ka z o.o
    ul. Grzybowska 77 lok. 227
    00-844 Warszawa
    NOWOCZESNE PROGRAMY DO ZARZ¡DZANIA O FIRMIE OFERTA POMOC TECHNICZNA PARTNERZY ... DLA PROGRAMISTÓW
    O firmie
    Perseus Spó³ka z o.o. jest firm± informatyczn± oferuj±c± swoim klientom pe³n± gamê rozwi±zañ wspomagaj±cych zarz±dzanie w firmach o ró¿nym profilu dzia³alno¶ci.
    Od listopada 2003 firma Perseus Sp. Z o.o. posiada akredytacjê Polskiej Agencji Rozwoju Przedsiêbiorczo¶ci w ramach programu Innowacje i technologie dla rozwoju przedsiêbiorstw, która umo¿liwi naszym klientom dostêp do europejskich ¶rodków finansowych (PHARE) na wspomaganie ma³ych i ¶rednich przedsiêbiorstw (MSP).
    Co to oznacza?
    Wszyscy kontrahenci, którzy zamierzaj± inwestowaæ w rozwój, przy wykorzystaniu nowoczesnych technik informatycznych, mog± uzyskaæ zwrot poniesionych nak³adów na inwestycje (us³ugi doradcze, projektowe, analizy przedwdro¿eniowe, wdro¿eniowe, szkoleniowe) w wysoko¶ci 60% ich warto¶ci.
    Tworzymy oprogramowanie dla przedsiêbiorstw obs³uguj±ce:
    - finanse

    69. Faculty Of Classics, University Of Oxford
    Links to several remote resources as well as local pages on Greek personal names, the Oxyrhynchus papyri project and UK mirror for perseus project.
    http://www.classics.ox.ac.uk/resources/index.html
    Skip to main content home admissions faculty ... sitemap Faculty of Classics
    University of Oxford Home > Resources
    Resources
    Webmaster . Last updated: February 25, 2004
    The Classics Office, The Classics Centre, 65 St Giles', Oxford OX1 3LU.
    QUICK LINKS
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    70. This Page Has Moved
    perseus. The Hero. The Brighter Stars of perseus.
    http://einstein.stcloudstate.edu/Dome/constellns/per.html
    This page has moved. In 5 seconds you should be transferred to the page at its new location at DomeOfTheSky.com. If you are not transferred within five seconds, please click the link below. http://DomeOfTheSky.com/clicks/per.html Please adjust your bookmarks.

    71. Project Gutenberg Edition Of The Heroes, Or Greek Fairy Tales For My Children
    Tales of perseus, the Argonauts, and Theseus, by Charles Kingsley; etext at the Project Gutenberg.
    http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=677

    72. Euclid, Elements (ed. Thomas L. Heath)
    Pages giving the full Heath text of Euclid's Elements, together with the Greek text.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/text?lookup=euc. toc

    73. Tähtitieteellinen Yhdistys Perseus
    perseus. Tavoitteensa toteuttamiseksi perseus järjestää retkiä ja leirejä sekä pienimuotoista ohjelmaa suurempien tapahtumien yhteydessä.
    http://www.ursa.fi/yhd/perseus/
    Perseus
    Tervetuloa tähtitieteen ja maukkaiden aterioiden pariin
    Seuran tavoitteena on tarjota jäsenistölleen mahdollisuuksia harrastaa rakkaita lajejaan tähtitiedettä ja hyvää ruokaa. Tavoitteensa toteuttamiseksi Perseus järjestää retkiä ja leirejä sekä pienimuotoista ohjelmaa suurempien tapahtumien yhteydessä. Sun Party V järjestetään 4.-5.7.2003 Artjärven Tähtikalliolla Ursan aurinko- sekä Kuu, planeetat ja komeetat -jaostojen kanssa. Yhdessäoloa, retkitunnelmaa, havaintoja (mitä voidaan) sekä mahdollista osallistumista havaintokeskuksen talkoisiin. päivitetty 28.5.2003 Veikko Mäkelä

    74. M. Tullius Cicero, Orations: For His House, Plancius, Sextius, Coelius, Milo, Li
    English translation by Yonge
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/text?lookup=cic. prov. init.

    75. Perseus (mythology) - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    perseus (mythology). From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Enlarge perseus slays Medusa. perseus was the son of Danae, the
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perseus_(mythology)
    Perseus (mythology)
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    Perseus slays Medusa Perseus was the son of Danae , the only child of Acrisius king of Argos . Disappointed by his lack of male heirs, he asked an oracle if this would change. The oracle told him that one day he would be killed by his daughter's child. She was childless and, meaning to keep her so, he shut her up in a brazen chamber. But Zeus came to her in the form of rain, and impregnated her. Soon after, their child Perseus was born. None too happy, but unwilling to provoke the wrath of the gods by killing his offspring, Acrisius cast the two into the sea in a wooden chest. They washed ashore on the island of Seriphos , where they were taken in by Dictys , the brother of king Polydectes , who raised the boy to manhood. Now after a time Polydectes fell in love with Danae, and so wanted to get Perseus out of the picture. He thereby hatched a plot to send him on a suicide mission. Polydectes placed some strong hints that he would love to have the head of Medusa , one of the gorgons whose very expression turns people to stone. He then announced that he would woo

    76. Perseus Encyclopedia
    With bibliography, from the perseus Project.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0004&que

    77. Perseus (constellation) - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    perseus (constellation). From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. perseus.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perseus_(constellation)
    Perseus (constellation)
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    Perseus
    larger map
    Abbreviation Per Genitive Persei Meaning in English Perseus Right ascension 3 h Declination Visible to latitude On meridian December Area
    - Total Ranked 24th
    615 sq. deg. Number of stars with
    apparent magnitude
    Brightest star
    - Apparent magnitude Mirphak
    Meteor showers
    Bordering constellations Perseus is a northern constellation , representing the Greek hero who slew the monster Medusa . It is one of Ptolemy's 48 constellations and was also adopted by the International Astronomical Union as one of the 88 modern constellations. It contains the famous variable star Algol Perseids meteor shower Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Notable features
    2 Notable deep sky objects

    3 Mythology

    4 External Links
    ...
    edit
    Notable features
    Here are some of its stars:

    78. Clinical Trials Database
    An inprogress list of available veterinary oncology clinical trials
    http://www.perseusfoundation.org/page13.html

    What is a Clinical Trial? Many naturally occurring cancers in pet animals closely resemble human cancer and provide meaningful systems for cancer research to benefit both man and animals. The veterinary facility providing the clinical trial, with owner's permission, may provide specimens obtained from the patient (blood, urine, and/or tumor samples) to basic researchers to gain additional information that may benefit present and future cancer patients. It is important to remember, research is not conducted on the pet itself. If you believe your pet with cancer might benefit from participating in a clinical trial or you would like additional information regarding a specific clinical trial, please contact us at: perseusmagic@erols.com.
    Dr. Kevin Hahn, Medical Oncologist, Gulf Coast Veterinary Oncologists

    79. The Legend Of Perseus
    Chris Oakley s home page The next installment Oedipus! The Legend of perseus. Chapter 1 Zeus appears to Danaë, perseus mother, in prison. Daedalus.
    http://www.cgoakley.demon.co.uk/perseus/
    [Chris Oakley's home page] [The next installment - Oedipus!]
    The Legend of Perseus
    Our part of the galaxy - like the other spiral arms - remains relatively unexplored by most of the hyper-advanced races that dwell near the centre, or hub cap, of the galaxy, and in the last few thousand years the only use they have made of our sector (which consists of little more than two million life-supporting planets) has been as a penal colony.
    It was then purely by chance that Gaea, a woman from one of the old crime families on the ultra-chic planet Chaos, and a neurotic with violent tendencies, was dropped off in Northern Greece to serve a two thousand year sentence for cannibalism. The gaolers, one of who had managed to get her pregnant in the long trip over, did not stay long enough to consider the fact that dropping a violent psychotic on a planet whose native life forms had vastly inferior powers was not really cricket.
    The rest is history, or, at least, mythology, and is chronicled by Homer and Euripides, amongst others. She bred incestuously with her son Uranus (no jokes, please) to produce - no big surprise - a series of genetic freaks, some of which were giants with a hundred hands and some of which had only one eye: only the youngest seven were remotely normal. Of all the murderous family squabbles that followed, culminating in her grandson Zeus emerging as the ruler, you would not want to know - at least not until our book on the subject comes out - but suffice it to say that if the Greeks thought they had problems before the gods came on the scene, well

    80. Texts In Perseus For Browsing: Greek
    Hundreds of Greek texts from 33 authors. Options to view in Roman or Greek characters, with links to lexicons for practically every word.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Texts/chunk_TOC.grk.html
    Perseus Tufts Collections: Classics Papyri Renaissance London ... Support Perseus
    Primary Text Index: Greek
    Note: This page is outdated. Perseus Texts are found in the Table of Contents Some links below may not work. Here are the primary texts currently available on our web site. They have been broken into chunks for ease of browsing, with links and a lookup tool to help you navigate through the texts quickly. Clicking on any Greek word in the text which is a link will take you to the morphological analysis for that word, and from there you can use the other text tools. Please see Text Help if you are unsure how to display Greek properly or how to use text tools Note: Textual reference appearing after titles in parentheses gives their standard scholarly abbreviations, and provides a template for how to look up other passages in that author while browsing.
    Index of Authors
    Aeschines Aeschylus Andocides Antiphon ... Xenophon
    Authors and their works:

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