
Birds play prominent and diverse roles in folklore, religion, and
popular culture. In religion, birds may serve as either messengers or priests and leaders for a
deity, such as in the Cult of
Makemake, in which the
Tangata manu of
Easter Island served as chiefs,
or as attendants, as in the case of
Hugin and Munin, two
Common Ravens who whispered news into the ears of the
Norse god Odin.
Priests were involved in
augury, or interpreting the words of birds while the "auspex" (from which the word "auspicious" is derived) watched their activities to foretell events.
They may also serve as
religious symbols, as when
Jonah (Hebrew:
יוֹנָה,
dove) embodied the fright, passivity, mourning, and beauty traditionally associated with doves.
Birds have themselves been deified, as in the case of the
Common Peacock, which is perceived as Mother Earth by the
Dravidians of India.
Some birds have also been perceived as monsters, including the mythological
Roc and the
Māori's legendary
Pouākai, a giant bird capable of snatching humans.
Birds have been featured in culture and art since prehistoric times, when they were represented in early
cave paintings.
Birds were later used in religious or symbolic art and design, such as the magnificent
Peacock Throne of the
Mughal and
Persian emperors.
With the advent of scientific interest in birds, many paintings of birds were commissioned for books. Among the most famous of these bird artists was
John James Audubon, whose paintings of
North American birds were a great commercial success in Europe and who later lent his name to the
National Audubon Society.
Birds are also important figures in poetry; for example,
Homer incorporated
Nightingales into his
Odyssey, and
Catullus used a
sparrow as an erotic symbol in his
Catullus 2.
The relationship between an
albatross and a sailor is the central theme of
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, which led to the use of the
term as a metaphor for a 'burden'.
Other
English metaphors derive from birds;
vulture funds and vulture investors, for instance, take their name from the scavenging vulture.
Perceptions of various bird species often vary across cultures.
Owls are associated with bad luck,
witchcraft, and death in parts of Africa,
but are regarded as wise across much of Europe.
Hoopoes were considered sacred in
Ancient Egypt and symbols of virtue in
Persia, but were thought of as thieves across much of Europe and harbingers of war in
Scandinavia.
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