WORLD OWL MYTHOLOGY
Abyssinia: the Hamites held the Owl to be  sacred.

Afghanistan: the Owl gave Man flint and iron to  make fire - in exchange, Man gave the Owl his feathers.

Africa, Central: the Owl is the familiar of  wizards to the Bantu.

Africa, East: the Swahili believe the Owl brings  illness to children.

Africa, Southern: Zulus know the Owl as the  sorcerers' bird.

Africa, West: the messenger of wizards and  witches, the Owl's cry presages evil.

Algeria: place the right eye of an Eagle Owl in  the hand of a sleeping woman and she will tell all.

Arabia: the Owl is a bird of ill omen, the  embodiment of evil spirits that carries off children at night.

According to  an ancient Arabic treatise, from each female Owl supposedly came two eggs, one  held the power to cause hair fall out and one held the power to restore it.

Arctic Circle: a little girl was turned into a  bird with a long beak by magic, but was so frightened she flapped about madly  and flew into a wall, flattening her face and beak. So the Owl was created.

Australia: Aborigines believe bats represent the  souls of men and Owls the souls of women. Owls are therefore sacred, because  your sister is an Owl - and the Owl is your sister.

Aztecs: one of their evil gods wore a Screech Owl  on his head.

Babylon: Owl amulets protected women during  childbirth.

Belgium: legend has it that a priest offered the  Owl his church tower to live in if the bird would get rid of the rats and mice  that plagued his church.

Bordeaux: throw salt in the fire to avoid the  Owl's curse

Borneo: the Supreme Being turned his wife into an  Owl after she told secrets to mortals.

Brittany: an Owl seen on the way to the harvest  is the sign of a good yield.

Burma: during a quarrel among the birds, the Owl  was jumped upon and so his face was flattened.

Cameroom: too evil to name, the Owl is known only  as "the bird that makes you afraid".

Carthage: the city was captured by Agathocles of  Syracuse (Southern Italy) in 310 BC. Afterward, he released Owls over his troops  and they settled on their shields and helmets, signifying victory in battle.

Celtic: the Owl was a sign of the underworld.

China: the Owl is associated with lightning  (because it brightens the night) and with the drum (because it breaks the  silence). Placing Owl effigies in each corner of the home protect it against  lightning. The Owl is a symbol of Too much Yang (positive, masculine, bright,  active energy).

Ethiopia: a man condemned to death was taken to a  table on which an Owl was painted, and then expected to take his own life.

Etruria: to the Etruscans of Ancient Italy the  Owl was an attribute of the god of darkness.

France: when a pregnant woman hears an Owl it is  an omen that her child will be a girl.

Germany: if an Owl hoots as a child is born, the  infant will have an unhappy life. "A charm against the terrible consequences  of being bitten by a mad dog was to carry the heart and right foot of an Owl  under the left armpit." (Encyclopedia of Superstitions)

Greenland: the Inuit see the Owl as a source of  guidance and help.

Hawaii: Owls feature in old war chants. 

Incas: venerated the Owl for its beautiful eyes  and head.

India: Seizures in children could be treated with  a broth made from Owl eyes. Rheumatism pain was treated with a gel made from Owl  meat. Owl meat could also be eaten as a natural aphrodisiac. In northern India,  if one ate the eyes of an Owl, they would be able to see in the dark. In  southern India, the cries of an Owl were interpreted by number: One hoot was an  omen of impending death; two meant success in anything that would be started  soon after; three represented a woman being married into the family; four  indicated a disturbance; five denoted coming travel; six meant guests were on  the way; seven was a sign of mental distress; eight foretold sudden death; and  nine symbolized good fortune. In parts of the Indian sub-continent people  believed that the Owl was married to the bat.

Indonesia: Around Manado, on the isle of Sulawesi, People  consider Owls very wise. They call them Burung Manguni. Every time someone wants  to travel, they listen to the owls. The owls make two different sounds; the  first means it is safe to go, and the second means it's better to stay at home.  The Minahasa, people around Manado, take those warnings very seriously. They  stay at home when Manguni says so. Information thanks to Alex van Poppel

Iran: In Farsi the Little Owl (Athene Noctua) is  called "Joghde-kochek". It is said that this bird brings bad luck. In Islam,  it's forbidden (Haram) to eat.

Ireland: An Owl that enters the house must be  killed at once, for if it flies away it will take the luck of the house with  it.

Israel: in Hebrew lore the Owl represents  blindness and desolation and is unclean.

Jamaica: to ward off the Owl's bad luck, cry  "Salt and pepper for your mammy".

Japan: among the Ainu people the Eagle Owl is  revered as a messenger of the gods or a divine ancestor.  They would drink  a toast to the Eagle Owl before a hunting expedition. The Screech Owl  warns against danger. Though they think the Barn Owl and Horned Owl are demonic.  They  would nail wooden images of owls to their houses in times of famine  or pestilence.

Latvia: when Christian soldiers entered his  temple, the local pagan god flew away as an Owl.

Lorraine: spinsters go to the woods and call to  the Owl to help them find a husband.

Luxembourg: Owls spy treasures, steal them and  hoard them.

Madagascar: Owls join witches to dance  on  the graves of the dead.

Malawi: the Owl carries messages for witches.

Malaya: Owls eat new-born babies.

Mayarts: Owls were the messengers of the rulers  of Xibalba, the Place of Phantoms.

Mexico: the Owl makes the cold North wind (the  gentle South wind is made by the butterfly). The Little Owl was called  "messenger of the lord of the land of the dead", and flew between the land of  the living and the dead.

Middle East: the Owl represents the souls of  people who have died un-avenged.

Mongolia: the Burial people hang up Owl skins to  ward off evil.

Mongolia, Inner: Owls enter the house by night to  gather human fingernails.

Morocco: the cry of Owls can kill infants.  According to Moroccan custom, an Owl's eye worn on a string around the neck was  an effective talisman to avert the "evil eye."

New Mexico: the hooting of Owls warns of the  coming of witches. 

New Zealand: to the Maoris it is an unlucky  bird.

Newfoundland: the hoot of the Horned Owl signals  the approach of bad weather.

Nigeria: in legend, Elullo, a witch and a chief  of the Okuni tribe, could become an Owl. In certain parts of Nigeria, natives  avoid naming the Owl, referring to it at "the bird that makes you afraid".

Persia: wizards use arrows tipped with a  bewitched man's fingernails to kill Owls.

Peru: boiled Owl is said to be a strong  medicine.

Poland: Polish folklore links Owls with death.  Girls who die unmarried turn into doves; girls who are married when they die  turn into Owls. An owl cry heard in or near a home usually meant impending  death, sickness, or other misfortune. An old story tells how the Owl does not  come out at during the day because it is too beautiful, and would be mobbed by  other, jealous birds.

Puerto Rico: The Owl is called "Mucaro". Back in the 1800s,  the people from the mountain coffee plantations used to blame the little mucaro  for the loss of coffee grains. The belief was that the coffee was part of the  owls' diet, and many owls were killed.There are old folklore songs on the  subject, one goes like this:
"Poor Mucaro
you're a gentleman
you just  want to eat a rat,
then the rat set up a trap,
he eats the coffee  grains
and people blame you."

Romania: the souls of repentant sinners flew to  heaven in the guise of a Snowy Owl.

Russia: hunters carry Owl claws so that, if they  are killed, their souls can use them to climb up to Heaven. Tartar shamen of  Central Russia could assume Owl shapes.
Kalmucks hold the Owl to be sacred  because one once saved the life of  Genghis Khan.

Samoa: the people are descended from an Owl.

Saxony: the Wend people say that the sight of an  Owl makes child-birth  easier.

Scotland: it's bad luck to see an Owl in  daylight. 

Shetland Isles: a cow will give bloody milk if  scared by an Owl.

Siberia: the Owl is a helpful spirit.

Spain: legend has it that the Owl was once the  sweetest of singers, until it  saw Jesus crucified. Ever since it has shunned  daylight and only repeats the words 'cruz, cruz' ('cross, cross').

Sri Lanka: the Owl is married to the bat.

Sumeria: The goddess of death, Lilith, was  attended by Owls.

Sweden: the Owl is associated with witch's.

Tangiers: Barn Owls are the clairvoyants of the  Devil.

Transylvania: farmers used to scare away Owls by  walking round their fields naked.

Ural Mountains: Snowy Owls were made to stay  behind while other birds migrate as a punishment for deception.

U.S.A: if you hear an Owl-cry you must return the  call, or else take off an item of clothing and put it on again  inside-out.

Louisiana: Owls are old people and should be  respected.

Louisiana Cajuns (individuals who share the French-based culture  originally brought to Louisiana by exiles from the French colony of Acadia in  the 18th century) thought you should get up from bed and turn your left shoe  upside down to avert disaster, if you hear an Owl calling late at  night.

Illinois: kill an Owl and revenge will be visited  upon your family.

Wales: an Owl heard among houses means an  unmarried girl has lost her virginity.
If a woman is pregnant and she alone  hears an owl hoot outside her house at night then her child will be  blessed.

In Welsh mythology, Blodeuedd, a woman made from flowers, is cursed  by her husband's uncle, turning her into an owl. "You are never to show your  face to the light of day, rather you shall fear other birds; they will be  hostile to you, and it will be their nature to maul and molest you wherever they  find you."
A wise old owl sat on an oak; The more he saw the less he spoke; The less he spoke the more he heard; Why aren't we like that wise old bird?
~ Edward Hersey Richards
Precocial birds like chickens, ostriches, ducks, and seagulls hatch ready to move around. They come from eggs with bigger yolks than altricial birds like owls, woodpeckers, and most small songbirds that need a lot of care from parents in order to survive.
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