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Pegasus, an 1888 sculpture that depicts the creature being tamed by Bellerophon, is the most famous work of French sculptor Émile Louis Picault, of which only 800 were made.[1]
The Pegasus logo has been used for over twenty-nine years by Courier Company Pegasus Express Ltd, appearing on vehicles, trailers, and depots in Scotland and England.
A Pegasus is the emblem of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, which names its bar the Pegasus. Pegasus is also the name of a University of Exeter's Classics and Ancient History Departmental journal, having had many entries from notable classicists as well as two articles from J. K. Rowling, a former student of the University's Classics and Ancient History Department.[3]
The Taiwanese company Asustek, manufacturer of the Asus brand computer, networking and consumer product. took its name from the Pegasus, omitting the first three letters in order for the company to appear first in telephone listings. Likewise, its former fabrication subsidiary Pegatron took the first four letters from the Pegasus.
PEGASYS (Hoffmann–La Roche) is a once-a-week injection for the treatment of hepatitis C that works to reduce the amount of hepatitis C virus in the body.
Pegasus is the name of a medevac helicopter based at the University of Virginia Medical Center that transports critically injured patients within 120 NM (220 km; 140 mi) of Charlottesville, Virginia.[4] The name was chosen because it was different from most other medevac programs, and because of stories of Pegasus carrying wounded soldiers from battle.[5]
In Disney'sFantasia, Pegasi are featured during the "Pastoral Symphony" segment, along with other mythical creatures, including unicorns and centaurs, and in Hercules he is the winged horse sidekick and friend to protagonist Hercules. In Clash of the Titans, Pegasus is captured by Perseus before Perseus kills Medusa. This version changes the method of Pegasus' birth, being the sole survivor of a Pegasus herd after they were killed by Thetis' son, Calibos. In Barbie and the Magic of Pegasus, Pegasus is a winged horse who helps Princess Annika and is later revealed to be her sister Brietta, who antagonist Wenlock transformed into a pegasus after she refused to marry him. In Johnny English, starring Rowan Atkinson, Pegasus, portrayed by Tim Pigott-Smith, is the codename of the head of MI7; in the sequel, Johnny English Reborn, the head of the organization is a woman, portrayed by Gillian Anderson, who uses the codename Pegasus. Pegasus has appeared in three Marvel Cinematic Universe films: in Thor: Ragnarok, during a flashback sequence where Valkyrie is briefly seen riding one, Avengers: Endgame, where she rides one in the final battle against Thanos, and in Thor: Love and Thunder.
Pegasus is also the name of a secret military project in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The project was a cover story for a faster-than-light drive built using Kree technology and powered by the Tessaract. After the ship crashes, Carol Danvers destroys the engine to prevent the Skrulls from salvaging it and gains superpowers after absorbing the energy from the explosion, becoming Captain Marvel.
In the anime and manga series One Piece, minor character Pierre, a bird of Gan Fall, can transform into a horse and a horse-bird hybrid due to eating a devil fruit. Another minor character, the horse Stronger, gained the ability to transform into a Pegasus after consuming the Horse-Horse Fruit, Model: Pegasus.
In the anime Beyblade: Metal Fusion, protagonist Gingka Hagane uses the powerful bit-beast Pegasus.
In the anime series Gundam, one of the main spaceships, White Base, is a Pegasus-class battleship.
In the anime Fairy Tail, one of the main guilds is called Blue Pegasus, with the guild's mark representing the name of the guild.
In Sailor Moon SuperS, the spirit of Helios, the guardian of the Golden Crystal, disguises himself as a Pegasus while hiding in Chibi-Usa's dreams. In the manga, he was cursed into the form of a Pegasus by Nehelenia.
In the anime Yu-Gi-Oh!, Maximillion Pegasus is the main antagonist of the first season and creator of the card game Duel Monsters.
Pegasus frequently appears in the 1960s series The Mighty Hercules as the titular character's steed.
In Fate/Stay Night, Pegasus is the Mythical Beast used by the Servant Rider when she uses one of her Noble Phantasms, Bellerophon. As a further reference to the original myth, where it was born from the blood of the decapitated Medusa, Rider, whose true identity is Medusa, first summoned the Pegasus by stabbing herself through the neck.
In the manga Yu-Gi-Oh!, the creator of the Duel Monsters card game is Pegasus J. Crawford, known as Maximillion Pegasus in the dub and English manga. As well, there are Duel Monsters called Firewing Pegasus and Sapphire Pegasus. In the manga Saint Seiya, the Pegasus is Seiya's destined constellation, and he dons an ancient Greek armor in the form of the winged horse.
Pegasus is the titular character in the Pegasus book series by Kate O'Hearn.
In the video gameGod of War II, Gaia gives a Fire Pegasus to protagonist Kratos, who seeks to find the Sisters of Fate in order to change his past, to travel to the Island of Creation, where the Fates' temple is located.
In the Nintendo DS game Heracles: Battle With The Gods, Pegasus is captured by Poseidon before being freed and reunited with Heracles after Poseidon's defeat.
In multiple games in the Fire Emblem series, pegasi are mounted by knights and called Pegasus Knights, or Falcon Knights in their upgraded form. Awakening introduces the class Dark Flier, which rides on a black Pegasus.
In the computer game Age of Mythology, Pegasus appears as a flying scout unit.
Pegasus appears in the final scene of the 2600 game No Escape.
Heroes of Might and Magic 3 features Pegasi being ridden by female elves as recruitable troops from the Rampart town.
In the Olympus Coliseum world in the video game Kingdom Hearts II, Pegasus aids protagonist Sora in fighting the Hydra.
In the video game Mega Man Star Force, one of the three versions, as well as the featured "Satellite Admin", is named Pegasus and resembles one.
In Heroes of the Storm, playable heroes can use pegasi as mounts to traverse the battleground.
The time machine in the Journeyman Project series is called the Pegasus Temporal Catapult, also known as Pegasus Device.
In Inazuma Eleven, the hissatsu technique "Pegasus Shot" involves summoning a blue Pegasus. A combination version involving three users is called "Tri-Pegasus", which summons a large white Pegasus.
In Inazuma Eleven GO, the follow up to Inazuma Eleven, and its two sequels, protagonist Matsukaze Tenma's personality is based on Pegasus. His keshin, a magical deity which can be summoned by its user, is a "Majin Pegasus", with the evolved version of his soul, an ability that lets the user transform into an animal, being Pegasus. As well, "Tenma", when written in kanji translates to "heavenly horse".
In Assassin's Creed Odyssey, the player can purchase a cosmetic skin for their horse that turns it into Pegasus.
In Fate/stay night, the Servant Rider can summon a pegasus that she rides with her Noble Phantasm Bellerophon.
"Wild Pegasus" was the ring name used by professional wrestler Chris Benoit during his time wrestling in Japan, winning the Super J-Cup while competing under this name.
Fusaichi Pegasus, a racehorse, won the 2000 Kentucky Derby.