Storks are fertility symbols and are associated with springtime and birth.
Children throughout Europe and America are taught that the stork delivers
newborns to their mothers. In some areas, it is thought that the stork can
cause a woman to become pregnant merely by looking at her.
It was believed that the souls of unborn children lived in watery areas
such as marshes, wells, springs, and ponds. Since storks frequented such areas,
they were thought to fetch the babies' souls and deliver them to their parents.
In Germany, storks found human infants called "stork-children"
dwelling in caves hidden in rocky steeps called "Adeborsteine" or
"stork-stones," and carried them to their expectant parents. Children
who wanted a baby brother or sister were encouraged to sing their desires to
the stork. Naughty little boys were carried in the bird's bill while nice ones
rode upon its back.
Its migratory habits made it an emblem of the traveler. Along with other
migratory birds, storks were biblical symbols of sensible backsliders who knew
when to return to the straight and narrow. In the lands they departed from,
storks were believed to become people and dwell as humans when they arrived at
their winter destinations. It was thought that they cried human tears when hurt
or saddened.
Storks are commonly believed to bring good fortune. In Germany, they were
known as "Adebar" which means "luck-bringer." In the
Netherlands, a stork nesting on one's roof is welcomed as a good omen, but in
Morocco it is a sign that the house will be abandoned by its occupants. To kill
a stork will cause one to have bad luck. The arrival of clean, white storks in
the spring heralds a good summer but dirty storks are portents of a bad year.
Storks, hurriedly abandoning their nests, are omens of great misfortune,
pestilence, and war.
Because they are rumored to feed their elderly
parents, storks are a symbol of filial piety or gratitude. They are emblems of
immortality and longevity. Legend says they live an incredibly long time. When
they are 600 years old they stop eating solid food and at 2000 years of age
they turn black and keep on living.
Hello Carla:) Lovely pictures of the Stork, and thank you for your commentry. I have learnt more about the Stork than I ever knew:) Nice music too!!
ResponderEliminarMuy bellas cigüeñas... las oigo desde el campanario en el pueblo. Pasan haciendo un ruido y abriendo sus alas. Todo es posible si crees en ello al ver una cigüena. Besos, mi querida Carla, para ti y para Sergio.
ResponderEliminar