In
Greek mythology,
Gorgophone (
Greek: Γοργοφόνη) was a daughter of
Perseus and
Andromeda. Her name means "Gorgon Slayer", a tribute to her father who killed
Medusa, the mortal
Gorgon. Gorgophone is a central figure in the history of
Sparta, having been married to two kings,
Oebalus of
Laconia and
Perieres of
Messenia. She was of Lelege descent, the
Leleges being a people from
Asia Minor who settled in Laconia. One of the sons of
Oibalos and Gorgophone was
Tyndareus, stepfather of
Helen of Troy,
Clytemnestra,
Castor and Pollux, and another was
Icarius, father of
Odysseus's wife,
Penelope. Thus, Perseus's descendants played a central role in the
Homeric epics and the pre-history of
Greece. The most famous historical Spartan woman derived her name from Gorgophone, that is, Gorgo, who was the daughter of the Spartan king
Cleomenes. Gorgo was born around 507 BC and after her father's rather awful death, she married his brother,
Leonidas, who became king and was the hero at the
Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC. Like her namesake, Gorgophone, Gorgo remarried another Spartan king.
Gorgo herself was renowned in Spartan legend, and it is curious that she bore the name that was so closely identified with the legendary Perseus and his daughter, who, if they really lived, pre-dated Gorgo by over seven centuries. Chief sources for Gorgophone are
Pausanias (Books II and IV) and
Apollodorus (Books I and III).
Plutarch's works contain a good deal on Gorgo, and she appears in a couple of
Herodotus's anecdotes that emphasize her close ties with her father and his trust in her acuity of judgment. With her first husband, Perieres, she gave birth to two sons,
Leucippus and
Aphareus. With her second husband, Oebalus, she became the mother of
Hippocoon, Tyndareus and Icarius.