It is found in the legends of many nations, such as Simurg, Phoenix in Persian mythology, Zümrüdü Anka or Simurg-u Anka in post-Islamic Turkish mythology, and previously referred to as Tuğrul. These birds mentioned are partly similar and partly different in these mythologies.
In Greek mythology, it was believed that the phoenix lived in the land of Abyssinia and that it was the size of an eagle and was very long-lived. Its eyes are as bright as stars, with a colorful crest on its head. The feathers of its neck are gilded, and the other sides are red. When it realizes that its life is coming to an end, it makes a nest for itself by plastering dry branches with glue and is built on it. After the hot sun ignites the nest and burns itself, an egg emerges from its ashes, and a new phoenix is born from it. For this reason, the Christians described this bird myth, which they called the phoenix, as a symbol of resurrection after death.
The Phoenix is a mythical, sacred bird of fire originating from ancient Phoenician mythology (according to Sanchuniathon), appearing in Chinese mythology, Egyptian religion, and later Greek mythology.
The Phoenix is a mythological bird with colorful feathers and a golden red (purple, blue, or green according to different legends) tail. It has a life cycle of 500 to 1000 years. Towards the end of its life, it builds a nest of branches and sets the nest on fire. Along with the nest, the bird also burns and turns into ashes. From these ashes, a new phoenix, or its eggs, emerges, born to live again. The new phoenix is doomed to live as much as the old one. In some stories, the newborn phoenix mummies into an egg made of resin from the ashes of its former state and deposits it in the Egyptian city of Heliopolis (the Greek city of the sun). It is said that the cry of the bird is like a beautiful song. Very few stories also mention their ability to transform into human beings.
The Phoenician is the central figure in ancient and new Lebanese cultures. The Lebanese are descendants of the Phoenicians, often describing themselves as the sons of the Phoenicians. Lebanon and Beirut, in particular, are symbolically depicted as phoenix birds, as they have been destroyed and rebuilt seven times in their long history.
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