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Rise of the Phoenix:
There are Chinese, Japanese, Russian,
Egyptian, and Native American counterparts of the Phoenix. (Fêng-Huang, Ho-oo,
Firebird, Benu, and Yel respectively). All of these birds are identified with
the sun."A mythical bird that never dies, the phoenix flies far ahead to t..."
Rise of the Phoenix:
There are Chinese, Japanese, Russian,
Egyptian, and Native American counterparts of the Phoenix. (Fêng-Huang, Ho-oo,
Firebird, Benu, and Yel respectively). All of these birds are identified with
the sun."A mythical bird that never dies, the phoenix flies far ahead to the
front, always scanning the landscape and distant space. It represents our
capacity for vision, for collecting sensory information about our environment
and the events unfolding within it. The phoenix, with its great beauty, creates
intense excitement and deathless inspiration." - The Feng Shui Handbook, feng
shui Master Lam Kam Chuen
Classical Arabian Phoenix:
Perhaps the most well known, the Arabian phoenix was a fabulous
mythical bird, said to be as large as an eagle, with brilliant scarlet and gold
plumage and a melodious cry. Making it's home near a cool well, the Phoenix
would appear at dawn every morning to sing a song so enchanting that even the
great sun god Apollo would stop to listen. It was said that only one phoenix
existed at any one time, and it is very long-lived with a life span of 500
years, 540 years, 1000 years, 1461 years or even 12,994 years (according to
various accounts). As the end of its life approached, the phoenix would build a
pyre nest of aromatic branches and spices such as myrrh, sets it on fire, and is
consumed in the flames. After three days the birth -- or as some legends say a
rebirth -- the phoenix arises from the ashes. According to some sources, the
phoenix arose from the midst of the flames. The young phoenix gathers the ashes
of its predecessor into an egg of myrrh and takes it to Heliopolis, the city of
the sun, to deposit it on the alter of the sun god. A symbolic representation of
the Death and rebirth of the sun. It is also described as being either eagle
like or heron like. It lives on dew, killing nothing and crushing nothing that
it touches. Generally considered the king of birds. It has alternatively been
called the bird of the sun, of Assyria, of Arabia, of the Ganges, the long-lived
bird and the Egyptian bird...
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