Topic Archive

Myths about Birds

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of Birds across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

7 myths currently featured for Birds.

Jingwei Tirelessly Carrying Twigs and Stones to Fill the Entire East Sea

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China Sea, Zhoushan, ChinaNüwa (Princess) • Jingwei (The Bird) • Yandi (The Flame Emperor)

The myth follows Nüwa, the daughter of the Flame Emperor, who drowns in the Eastern Sea and is reborn as the bird Jingwei. To prevent others from suffering her fate, she vows to fill the vast ocean with pebbles and twigs from the mountains. It is a timeless story of indomitable will and the refusal to surrender to overwhelming odds.

Jingwei Drowning in the East Sea and Transforming into a Mythical Bird

🐉 Chinese MythologyEast China Sea, Zhoushan, ChinaJingwei (Nüwa) • Yandi (The Flame Emperor) • Spirit of the East Sea

Nüwa, the youngest daughter of the Flame Emperor Yandi, drowned in the East Sea and was reborn as a bird named Jingwei. Resenting the sea for taking her life, she vowed to fill it up by carrying stones and twigs from the mountains to the water. This myth serves as a timeless symbol of indomitable will and perseverance against impossible odds.

Sigurd Tasting Fafnir's Blood and Understanding the Birds' Warnings

🪓 Norse MythologyRamsund, Södermanland, SwedenSigurd • Regin • Fafnir

After the legendary hero Sigurd slays the dragon Fafnir, his foster-father Regin asks him to roast the beast's heart. Upon accidentally burning his thumb and tasting the dragon's blood, Sigurd suddenly gains the ability to understand the speech of birds. The forest birds warn him of Regin's plan to murder him for the dragon's gold, prompting Sigurd to kill Regin and claim the legendary...

Huginn and Muninn Flying Across the World to Bring Odin News

🪓 Norse MythologyMount Kebnekaise, SwedenOdin • Huginn • Muninn

Each morning at daybreak, the ravens Huginn and Muninn are dispatched from the shoulders of the god Odin to traverse the nine realms, specifically the world of men known as Midgard. Representing Thought and Memory, they act as the All-Father's primary source of intelligence, observing all actions, whispers, and omens across the earth. Their nightly return to the high seat of Hlidskjalf is...

The Muses Defeating the Pierides in a Singing Contest

🏛️ Greek MythologyValley of the Muses, Mount Helicon, GreeceCalliope • Clio • Erato

The nine daughters of King Pierus, known as the Pierides, challenged the divine Muses to a musical competition on the slopes of Mount Helicon. While the sisters sang of the gods' cowardice during the Gigantomachy, the Muse Calliope performed a sublime hymn to the goddesses of the earth and the harmony of the spheres. After the local nymphs declared the Muses victorious, the Pierides were...

Ceyx and Alcyone’s Transformation into Halcyon Birds

🏛️ Greek MythologyTrachis, Malian Gulf, GreeceCeyx • Alcyone • Zeus

Ceyx and Alcyone were a devoted royal couple whose love was so profound they compared themselves to the gods Zeus and Hera. Their hubris led to a tragic shipwreck where Ceyx perished, but the gods ultimately took pity on their grief, transforming the pair into kingfishers and granting them the 'Halcyon Days' of calm weather for their nesting.

Tereus, Procne, and Philomela’s Tragic Cycle of Revenge

🏛️ Greek MythologyAncient Daulis, Phocis, GreeceTereus • Procne • Philomela

A haunting tale of betrayal and vengeance where the Thracian King Tereus violates his sister-in-law Philomela and silences her by cutting out her tongue. Philomela communicates the crime through weaving, leading her sister Procne to execute a gruesome revenge involving their son, Itys. The tragedy concludes with the divine transformation of the three protagonists into birds, forever echoing...