'Where is it and what kind of coffin does this bird put its father in and where does it bury it?' According to the English text, this historian calls Phoenix's father a father, but calls Phoenix the neutral form (it).
Although it seems necessary to know about Phoenix, among the Egyptians - perhaps only a handful of priests - no one knows when 500 years will pass, but at least we need to know where Egypt is and Heliopolis where Phoenix is. Another Greek, Claudius Aelianus, also known as Aelian, wrote about Phoenix 200 AD: 'Phoenix keeps the arithmetic of 500 years correct without the help of arithmetic or finger counting, because he learns everything from nature, which is the whole intellect.
During the eight centuries BC, the Phoenix bird is mentioned in nine references, eight of which have come down to us through quotations from later authors, and only one case by Herodotus, a Greek historian from 484 to 424 BC, is preserved in full.
Phoenix originally entered European culture from ancient Iran. Phoenix in European culture is often an allegory of immortality and eternal life. He emerges with a youthful freshness and begins and passes another round of life. In English culture, the Phoenix phoenix is a mythical bird, very beautiful and unique in its kind, which, according to legend, lives in the western desert for 500 or 600 years, burns itself on a pile of debris, and from the resulting ashes, he himself once again.