高分求凤凰
来源:百度知道 编辑:UC知道 时间:2024/05/27 20:14:05
http://birds.suite101.com/article.cfm/phoenix_symbol_of_immortality
In Persian mythology, Si'morgh, (Persian: سيمرغ, Middle Persian: senmurv) was a winged, bird-like creature that was very large and extremely ancient. The Simurgh appears in many Iranian literary classics such as Farid ud-Din Attar's Conference of the Birds as instructor and birds leader, and in Ferdowsi's epic Shahnameh (The Book of Kings); Phoenix raised up and cherished Zaal or Zal, father of Rostam.
The phoenix in the Summer Palace, Beijing, China.The phoenix the central figure in Lebanese ancient and modern cultures, as Lebanese are descendants of the Phoenicians and often claim themselves sons of the Phoenix.[citation needed] Lebanon, and Beirut particularly, is often depicted symbolically as a phoenix bird having been destroyed and