Difference between revisions of "Peacock"
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_7092" /> == | == International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_7092" /> == | ||
<p> ''''' pē´kok ''''' ( תּכּיּים , <i> ''''' tukkı̄yı̄m ''''' </i> (plural); Latin <i> Pavo cristatus </i> ): | <p> ''''' pē´kok ''''' ( תּכּיּים , <i> ''''' tukkı̄yı̄m ''''' </i> (plural); Latin <i> Pavo cristatus </i> ): A bird of the genus Pavo. Japan is the native home of the plainer peafowl; Siam, [[Ceylon]] and India produce the commonest and most gorgeous. The peacock has a bill of moderate size with an arched tip, its cheeks are bare, the eyes not large, but very luminous, a crest of 24 feathers 2 inches long, with naked shafts and broad tips of blue, glancing to green. The neck is not long but proudly arched, the breast full, prominent and of bright blue green, blue predominant. The wings are short and ineffectual, the feathers on them made up of a surprising array of colors. The tail consists of 18 short, stiff, grayish-brown feathers. Next is the lining of the train, of the same color. The glory of this glorious bird lies in its train. It begins on the back between the wings in tiny feathers not over 6 inches in length, and extends backward. The quills have thick shafts of purple and green shades, the eye at the tip of each feather from one-half to 2 inches across, of a deep peculiar blue, surrounded at the lower part by two half-moon-shaped crescents of green. Whether the train lies naturally, or is spread in full glory, each eye shows encircled by a marvel of glancing shades of green, gold, purple, blue and bronze. When this train is spread, it opens like a fan behind the head with its sparkling crest, and above the wondrous blue of the breast. The bird has the power to contract the muscles at the base of the quills and play a peculiar sort of music with them. It loves high places and cries before a storm in notes that are startling to one not familiar with them. The bird can be domesticated and will become friendly enough to take food from the hand. The peahen is smaller than the cock, her neck green, her wings gray, tan and brown - but she has not the gorgeous train. She nests on earth and breeds with difficulty when imported, the young being delicate and tender. The grown birds are hardy when acclimated, and live to old age. By some freak of nature, pure white peacocks are at times produced. Aristophanes mentioned peafowl in his <i> [[Birds]] </i> , II. 102,269. [[Alexander]] claimed that he brought them into [[Greece]] from the east, but failed to prove his contention. Pliny wrote that Hortensius was the first to serve the birds for food, and that Aufidius Lurco first fattened and sold them in the markets. It was the custom to skin the bird, roast and recover it and send it to the table, the gaudy feathers showing. </p> <p> The first appearance of the bird in the Bible occurs in a summing-up of the wealth and majesty of Solomon ( 1 Kings 10:22 : "For the king had at sea a navy of [[Tarshish]] with the navy of Hiram: once every three years came the navy of Tarshish, bringing gold, and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacocks"). (Here the [[Septuagint]] translates πελεκητοί , <i> '''''pelekētoı́''''' </i> (s.c. λίθοι , <i> '''''lı́thoi''''' </i> ), = "(stones) carved with an ax.") The same statement is made in 2 Chronicles 9:21 : "For the king had ships that went to Tarshish with the servants of Huram; once every three years came the ships of Tarshish, bringing gold and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacocks" Septuagint omits). There is no question among scholars and scientists but that these statements are true, as the ships of Solomon are known to have visited the coasts of India and Ceylon, and Tarshish was on the [[Malabar]] coast of India, where the native name of the peacock was <i> '''''tokei''''' </i> , from which <i> '''''tukkı̄yı̄m''''' </i> undoubtedly was derived (see [[Gold]] , and The <i> Expository Times </i> , IX, 472). The historian Tennant says that the [[Hebrew]] names for "ivory" and "apes" were also the same as the Tamil. The reference to the small, ineffectual wing of the peacock which scarcely will lift the weight of the body and train, that used to be found in Job, is now applied to the ostrich, and is no doubt correct: </p> <p> "The wings of the ostrich wave proudly; </p> <p> But are they the pinions and plumage of love?" </p> <p> ( Job 39:13 ). </p> <p> While the peacock wing seems out of proportion to the size of the bird, it will sustain flight and bear the body to the treetops. The wing of the ostrich is useless for flight. </p> | ||
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16425" /> == | == Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16425" /> == | ||
<p> | <p> A good deal of discussion has token place respecting the precise meaning of the word which is thus rendered in the Authorized Version . Some have supposed that a crested parrot is meant, others that the pheasant is the bird intended, but the weight of evidence is in favor of the usual rendering. </p> <p> There are only two species of true peacocks, viz., that under consideration, which is the Pavo cristatus of Linn.; and another, Pavo muticus, more recently discovered, which differs in some particulars, and originally belongs to Japan and China. [[Peacocks]] bear the cold of the Himalayas: they run with great swiftness, and where they are, serpents do not abound, as they devour the young with great avidity, and, it is said, attack with spirit even the cobra de capello when grown to considerable size, arresting its progress and confusing it by the rapidity and variety of their evolutions around it, till exhausted with fatigue it is struck on the head and dispatched. </p> <p> A detailed description of a species so well known, we deem superfluous. </p> | ||
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_54955" /> == | == Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_54955" /> == |
Revision as of 09:33, 13 October 2021
Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary [1]
תוכיים , 1 Kings 10:29; 2 Chronicles 9:21; a bird distinguished by the length of its tail, and the brilliant spots with which it is adorned; which displays all that dazzles in the sparkling lustre of gems, and all that astonishes in the rainbow. The peacock is a bird originally of India; thence brought into Persia and Media. Aristophanes mentions Persian peacocks; and Suidas calls the peacock the Median bird. From Persia it was gradually dispersed into Judea, Egypt, Greece, and Europe. If the fleet of Solomon visited India, they might easily procure this bird, whether from India itself, or from Persia; and certainly the bird by its beauty was likely to attract attention, and to be brought among other rarities of natural history by Solomon's servants, who would be instructed to collect every curiosity in the countries they visited.
Webster's Dictionary [2]
(1): ( n.) In common usage, the species in general or collectively; a peafowl.
(2): ( n.) The male of any pheasant of the genus Pavo, of which at least two species are known, native of Southern Asia and the East Indies.
Holman Bible Dictionary [3]
Job 39:13 1 Kings 10:22 2 Chronicles 9:21
Easton's Bible Dictionary [4]
1 Kings 10:22 2 Chronicles 9:21 Job 39:13
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [5]
pē´kok ( תּכּיּים , tukkı̄yı̄m (plural); Latin Pavo cristatus ): A bird of the genus Pavo. Japan is the native home of the plainer peafowl; Siam, Ceylon and India produce the commonest and most gorgeous. The peacock has a bill of moderate size with an arched tip, its cheeks are bare, the eyes not large, but very luminous, a crest of 24 feathers 2 inches long, with naked shafts and broad tips of blue, glancing to green. The neck is not long but proudly arched, the breast full, prominent and of bright blue green, blue predominant. The wings are short and ineffectual, the feathers on them made up of a surprising array of colors. The tail consists of 18 short, stiff, grayish-brown feathers. Next is the lining of the train, of the same color. The glory of this glorious bird lies in its train. It begins on the back between the wings in tiny feathers not over 6 inches in length, and extends backward. The quills have thick shafts of purple and green shades, the eye at the tip of each feather from one-half to 2 inches across, of a deep peculiar blue, surrounded at the lower part by two half-moon-shaped crescents of green. Whether the train lies naturally, or is spread in full glory, each eye shows encircled by a marvel of glancing shades of green, gold, purple, blue and bronze. When this train is spread, it opens like a fan behind the head with its sparkling crest, and above the wondrous blue of the breast. The bird has the power to contract the muscles at the base of the quills and play a peculiar sort of music with them. It loves high places and cries before a storm in notes that are startling to one not familiar with them. The bird can be domesticated and will become friendly enough to take food from the hand. The peahen is smaller than the cock, her neck green, her wings gray, tan and brown - but she has not the gorgeous train. She nests on earth and breeds with difficulty when imported, the young being delicate and tender. The grown birds are hardy when acclimated, and live to old age. By some freak of nature, pure white peacocks are at times produced. Aristophanes mentioned peafowl in his Birds , II. 102,269. Alexander claimed that he brought them into Greece from the east, but failed to prove his contention. Pliny wrote that Hortensius was the first to serve the birds for food, and that Aufidius Lurco first fattened and sold them in the markets. It was the custom to skin the bird, roast and recover it and send it to the table, the gaudy feathers showing.
The first appearance of the bird in the Bible occurs in a summing-up of the wealth and majesty of Solomon ( 1 Kings 10:22 : "For the king had at sea a navy of Tarshish with the navy of Hiram: once every three years came the navy of Tarshish, bringing gold, and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacocks"). (Here the Septuagint translates πελεκητοί , pelekētoı́ (s.c. λίθοι , lı́thoi ), = "(stones) carved with an ax.") The same statement is made in 2 Chronicles 9:21 : "For the king had ships that went to Tarshish with the servants of Huram; once every three years came the ships of Tarshish, bringing gold and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacocks" Septuagint omits). There is no question among scholars and scientists but that these statements are true, as the ships of Solomon are known to have visited the coasts of India and Ceylon, and Tarshish was on the Malabar coast of India, where the native name of the peacock was tokei , from which tukkı̄yı̄m undoubtedly was derived (see Gold , and The Expository Times , IX, 472). The historian Tennant says that the Hebrew names for "ivory" and "apes" were also the same as the Tamil. The reference to the small, ineffectual wing of the peacock which scarcely will lift the weight of the body and train, that used to be found in Job, is now applied to the ostrich, and is no doubt correct:
"The wings of the ostrich wave proudly;
But are they the pinions and plumage of love?"
( Job 39:13 ).
While the peacock wing seems out of proportion to the size of the bird, it will sustain flight and bear the body to the treetops. The wing of the ostrich is useless for flight.
Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [6]
A good deal of discussion has token place respecting the precise meaning of the word which is thus rendered in the Authorized Version . Some have supposed that a crested parrot is meant, others that the pheasant is the bird intended, but the weight of evidence is in favor of the usual rendering.
There are only two species of true peacocks, viz., that under consideration, which is the Pavo cristatus of Linn.; and another, Pavo muticus, more recently discovered, which differs in some particulars, and originally belongs to Japan and China. Peacocks bear the cold of the Himalayas: they run with great swiftness, and where they are, serpents do not abound, as they devour the young with great avidity, and, it is said, attack with spirit even the cobra de capello when grown to considerable size, arresting its progress and confusing it by the rapidity and variety of their evolutions around it, till exhausted with fatigue it is struck on the head and dispatched.
A detailed description of a species so well known, we deem superfluous.
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [7]
Bibliography Information McClintock, John. Strong, James. Entry for 'Peacock'. Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature. https://www.studylight.org/encyclopedias/eng/tce/p/peacock.html. Harper & Brothers. New York. 1870.
References
- ↑ Peacock from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary
- ↑ Peacock from Webster's Dictionary
- ↑ Peacock from Holman Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Peacock from Easton's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Peacock from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
- ↑ Peacock from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature
- ↑ Peacock from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature