Serifos
Mythology
Serifos occupies an important part of Greek
mythology, since its name is connected to
two of the greatest heroes of the mythology,
Odysseus and Perseus, while it is also said
that the Cyclopes lived in its caves.
Nowadays, it is said that the Cyclopes lived
in the
Cave of the Cyclops, while the remains
of the cyclopean walls are also attributed
to them.
The
most important legend making reference to Serifos is that relating the
island with Perseus. According to the legend, Acrisius, the king of
Argos, went to the oracle at Delphi wanting to know whether he would
have a child and the oracle warned him that he would die by the hand of
his grandson, born by his daughter Danae, who would succeed him to the
throne. To protect himself, Acrisius locked Danae away in a cellar.
However, he did not take into account the sudden love of Zeus, who came
in through the roof as golden shower and gave her a son, Perseus.

Acrisius terrified that the oracle will come true but unwilling to kill
his daughter and her divine son, shut Danae and Perseus in a wooden
chest and let them in the Aegean Sea. The chest cast out in the coast of
Serifos, where the fishermen found it and took it to Dictys, one of the
two kings of Serifos, in whose palace Perseus grew up.
Meanwhile, the second king of Serifos, the
cunning Polydectes, fell in love with Danae
and wanting to get rid of Perseus he sent
him to bring him the head of the gorgon
Medusa as a wedding present for his supposed
wedding to Hippodameia, daughter of Oinomaos.
It was known that the terrible Medusa turned
people into stone with her gaze.

Thus began Perseus’ long journey. At first
accompanied by Athena and Hermes, who
offered him two precious weapons to help him
-Athena gave him a bronze shield and Hermes
a sword- he arrived to his first
destination, to the home of the three Graeae,
Enyo, Pephredo and Deino, in the land of
Forkynos and Cetus. The three sisters looked
old, shared one tooth and were the only ones
that knew were their sisters, the Gorgons,
lived. To take the information he wanted,
Perseus watched them hidden and the moment
they were passing their eye and tooth
between themselves he snatched them and
threatened them that he wouldn’t return them
unless they told him where their sisters’
laird was. The three Graeae naturally
accepted to lead Perseus to the Gorgone
island, where the Gorgons, Medusa and her
sisters, Stheno and Euryale, lived.
According
to the legend, before Perseus went to Gorgone, he passed through the
garden of the Nymphs and they offered him three precious tools: the
crest of Pluto, the God of the Underworld, which made him invisible, a
pair of winged sandals that would enable him to fly and a bag that
changed size depending on its contents. Thus, flying above the ocean he
arrived to Gorgone, where he beheaded Medusa using the shield to see
only her reflection thus avoiding her gaze that would turn him into
stone, and then put her head in his bag. It is said that Pegasus, the
winged horse of the mythology, was born by the drops of blood that were
shed on the ground.
In
his way back, Perseus faced numerous dangers. Passing by Ethiopia, he
found Andromeda, the daughter of king Cepheus, tied to a rock to be
eaten by a monster to appease Poseidon so that he would forgive Cepheus
wife, Cassiopeia, who had insulted the god's daughters. Perseus killed
the monster and rescued Andromeda, he married her and took her with him
to Serifos.
There, he showed the head to Polydectes, who
turned into stone when he looked at it and
Dictys was made king of the island.
According to the legend, he then took his
wife, Andromeda, and his mother, Danae, and
returned to Argos, where, on the day of
their arrival, the games were held in the
presence of king Acrisius. Perseus
participated in the games giving a fake
identity and threw the discus that deviated
from its course and killed Acrisius by
hitting him. Thus, the Delphic utterance
came true and Perseus settled there as king
of Argos. An equally great hero of the Greek
mythology, Hercules, was born by his
grandson, Amphitryon, and Alcmene.

Finally, Odysseus is said to have passed by
Serifos on his return journey to Ithaca,
where he faced the Cyclops Polyphemus, whom
he blinded with his spear to allow him and
his men to escape from him. |