Ornithomancy (modern term from Greek ornis "bird" and manteia "divination"; in Ancient Greek: οἰωνίζομαι "take omens from the flight and cries of birds") is the practice of reading omens from the actions of birds followed in many ancient cultures including the Greeks, and is equivalent to the augury employed by the ancient Romans.

Etruscan wall painting from Tomba degli Auguri (c. 530 BC) showing two augurs

Ornithomancy in some form has been found globally among a wide variety of pre-industrial peoples.[1]

Mediterranean developments

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Prophesying by birds appeared among the Hittites in Anatolia, with texts on bird oracles written in Hittite known from the 13th or 14th century BCE,[2] and from whom the Greek practice may derive.[3] It was also familiar to the Etruscans, who may have brought it to Rome.[4]

Greek evidence

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Ornithomancy dates back to early Greek times, appearing on Archaic vases, as well as in Hesiod and Homer:[5] one notable example from the latter occurs in the Odyssey, when an eagle appears three times, flying to the right, with a dead dove in its talons, an augury interpreted as the coming of Odysseus, and the death of his wife's suitors. Aeschylus has Prometheus claim to have introduced ornithomancy to mankind, by indicating among the birds “those by nature favourable, and those/Sinister”.[6]

Ornithomancy could be spontaneous, or it could be the result of a formal consultation:[7] the seer would face north, and birds on their right—the east, the direction of sunrise—were taken as favourable (the reverse being true of the Roman augur, who by contrast faced south).[8] Although it was mainly the flights and songs of birds that were studied, any action could have been interpreted to either foretell the future or relate a message from the gods.

Roman practice

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Omens from observation of the flight of birds were considered with the utmost seriousness by Romans. The practice of ornithomancy by priests called augurs was a branch of Roman national religion from before the founding of the city, which had its own priestly college to supervise its practice.[9]

The word "inauguration" is derived from the Latin noun inauguratio derived from the verb inaugurare which was to "take omens from birds in flight." Since Roman augurs predominantly looked at birds for omens, they were also called auspex ("bird watcher", plural auspices), however they also interpreted thunder, lightning, the behavior of certain animals, and strange events. The phrase "under the auspices" is derived from this need for a favourable reading of the omens by the augurs.[10][11]

Cultural echoes

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  • Lewis Namier introduced his prosopographical study of eighteenth century politics in England with a quotation from Aeschylus on ornithomancy: “I took pains to determine the flight of crook-taloned birds, marking which were of the right by nature, and which were of the left, and what were their ways of living, each after his kind”.[12]
  • The magpie counting song is a folklore remnant of ornithomancy.[13]

Other examples

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One of the black bird sculptures of Taivoan people in the Public Hall Kong-kài in Rauron.

Taiwan

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The Taivoan people refer to the 'oh-ah, oh-ah' call of crows as pháinn-kiat-tiāu, signifying an omen of bad luck and could also indicate an impending attack by other indigenous communities. Hunters are advised not to leave for hunting if they heard such a call. The black bird sculptures, commonly seen on the roofs of the Public Hall Kong-kài in Taivoan communities like Rauron, are believed to represent crows.[14]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ A. Mouton, Luwian Identities (2013) p. 329-30
  2. ^ Sakuma, Yasuhiko (2013). "Terms of Ornithomancy in Hittite" (PDF). Tokyo University Linguistic Papers. 33: 219–238. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-12-23. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  3. ^ A. Mouton, Luwian Identities (2013) p. 335-40
  4. ^ L. Cottrell, The Penguin Book of Lost Worlds 2 (1966) p. 158
  5. ^ D. Ogden, A Companion to Greek Religion (2010) p. 151
  6. ^ Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound (1982) p. 35
  7. ^ A. Mouton, Luwian Identities (2013) p. 336
  8. ^ H. Nettleship ed., A Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1891) p. 86
  9. ^ Ingersoll, Ernest (1923). Birds in legend fable and folklore. Longmans, Green and Co. pp. 212–225.
  10. ^ Mitchell, James (1908). Significant etymology. William Blackwood and Sons. pp. 16–17.
  11. ^ Weekley, Ernest (1921). Etymological dictionary of modern English. London: John Murray. p. 90.
  12. ^ L. R. Namier, The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III (London 1929) p. ii
  13. ^ T. D'Elgin, The Everything Bird Book (1998) p. 225
  14. ^ Mata Taiwan. "楠梓仙溪大武壠族漁獵相關禁忌:烏鴉叫聲「歹結調」" [Taboos Related to Fishing and Hunting of the Taivoan People in Namasia River: The Crow's Call "Pháinn-Kiat-Tiāu"]. Taiwan Cultural Memory Bank. Retrieved 2023-03-31.

Sources

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