Printer Friendly
Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary
3,900,900,042 visitors served.
forum Join the Word of the Day Mailing List For webmasters
?
Dictionary/
thesaurus
Medical
dictionary
Legal
dictionary
Financial
dictionary
Acronyms
 
Idioms
Encyclopedia
Wikipedia
encyclopedia
?

Phoenix
(redirected from risen like a phoenix from the ashes)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal 0.01 sec.

Phoenix, harbor, Crete

Phoenix (fē`nĭks), Crete: see Phenice Phenice , in the New Testament.

1 Same as Phoenicia.

2 Harbor, SW Crete. It was also called Phoenix.
..... Click the link for more information.
 (2.)

phoenix, in mythology

phoenix, fabulous bird that periodically regenerated itself, used in literature as a symbol of death and resurrection. According to legend, the phoenix lived in Arabia; when it reached the end of its life (500 years), it burned itself on a pyre of flames, and from the ashes a new phoenix arose. As a sacred symbol in Egyptian religion, the phoenix represented the sun, which dies each night and rises again each morning. According to Herodotus the bird was red and golden and resembled an eagle.

Phoenix, city, United States

Phoenix, city (1990 pop. 983,403), state capital and seat of Maricopa co., S Ariz., on the Salt River; inc. 1881. It is the largest city in Arizona, the hub of the rich agricultural region of the Salt River valley, and an important center for research and development, electronics, telecommunications, semiconductors, and the aerospace industry. Food processing and the production of aircraft parts, electrical appliances, agricultural chemicals, machinery, tools, plastic and wood products, cosmetics, and leather goods remains central to its manufacturing base. Greater Phoenix is a popular resort area, and tourism is also important to the economy.

The city was founded on the site of ancient Native American canals; hence its name, signifying a new town which had risen from the ruins of an old civilization. In 1868, pioneers developed what remained of the Native Americans' irrigation system; water was diverted from the Salt River, and farming began, supplemented by mining and ranching in the surrounding desert and mountains. The completion (1911) of the Roosevelt Dam on the Salt River brought power and abundant water to the community, and opened a new era of farming in the valley.

Phoenix grew as an important trade and distribution center. It boomed during World War II, when three airfields were opened. The phenomenal growth continued after the war; veterans who had been stationed in Phoenix returned to stay, and manufacturing concerns moved there to utilize the large labor supply. The expanding metropolitan area includes the suburbs of Mesa Mesa , city (1990 pop. 288,091), Maricopa co., S central Ariz., in the irrigated Salt River valley; inc. 1883. Electronic components, fabricated metals, aircraft, and machine tools are among its various manufactures. One of the fastest-growing U.S.
..... Click the link for more information.
, Scottsdale Scottsdale, city (1990 pop. 130,069), Maricopa co., central Ariz.; settled in 1895 by Winfield Scott, inc. 1951. It is a resort and retirement center in the Phoenix metropolitan area.
..... Click the link for more information.
, Tempe Tempe , city (1990 pop. 141,865), Maricopa co., S Ariz., in the Salt River valley, a suburb of Phoenix; inc. 1894. Its population has grown markedly since the 1970s with the expansion of the greater Phoenix area.
..... Click the link for more information.
, Glendale Glendale.

1 City (1990 pop. 148,134), Maricopa co., S central Ariz., adjacent to Phoenix; inc. 1910. It is located in a rich agricultural region irrigated by the Salt River project. Glendale has become one of the fastest-growing U.S.
..... Click the link for more information.
, Chandler Chandler, city (1990 pop. 90,533), Maricopa co., S central Ariz., in the Salt River valley; inc. 1920. It is both a residential community and a center for research and technology. Tourism is also important, and the San Marcos Golf Resort is in Chandler.
..... Click the link for more information.
, and Peoria Peoria .

1 City (1990 pop. 50,618), Maricopa co., central Ariz., a suburb of Phoenix; settled 1897, inc. 1954. With the completion of the Arizona Canal in 1885, the area was settled by families from Peoria, Ill.
..... Click the link for more information.
, all of which are among the fastest-growing cities in the United States.

Among the area's many outstanding parks are the Desert Botanical Gardens, Camelback Mountain, and the nearby South Mountain Park, which has an active gold mine. Also in the area are a number of Native American communities and reservations, national monuments, and state parks. Among its museums are the Heard Museum, with Native American art of the Southwest; the Phoenix Art Museum; the Pioneer Arizona Living History Museum, with pioneer relics; the Pueblo Grande Museum, containing excavations of Native American ruins c.800 years old; and the Arizona Capitol Museum. Other attractions are the Phoenix Zoo, the Arizona Science Center, and the Mystery Castle, built of native rock.

Phoenix is the seat of the Univ. of Phoenix, Arizona State Univ. West, Grand Canyon Univ., and Southwestern College. It has a symphony orchestra, as well as opera and ballet companies. The Phoenix Suns play in the National Basketball Association, the Coyotes in the National Hockey League, and the Arizona Diamondbacks in the National League (baseball). The Arizona Cardinals of the National Football League play in nearby Tempe. Several major-league baseball teams have spring-training camps in the area.

Bibliography

See J. E. Buchanan, Phoenix: A Chronological and Documentary History, 1865–1976 (1978); G. W. Johnson Jr., Phoenix (1982); B. Luckingham, Phoenix: The History of a Southwestern Metropolis (1989).


phoenix

In ancient Egypt and in classical antiquity, a fabulous bird associated with the worship of the sun. The Egyptian phoenix was said to be as large as an eagle, with brilliant scarlet and gold plumage and a melodious cry. Only one phoenix existed at a time, and it lived no less than 500 years. As its end approached, it built a nest of aromatic boughs and spices, set it on fire, and was consumed in the flames. From the pyre was born a new phoenix, which sealed its predecessor's ashes in an egg of myrrh and flew to Heliopolis to deposit them on the altar of the sun god. The phoenix thus symbolized immortality. See also fenghuang.


Phoenix

City (pop., 2000: 1,321,045), capital of Arizona, U.S. It is located on the Salt River. The river valley was occupied as early as AD 1300 by prehistoric Indians, now known as the Hohokam culture, who disappeared in the early 15th century. A village was founded on the site in 1867 and incorporated as a city in 1881. It became the territorial capital in 1889 and state capital in 1912. There was widespread expansion after World War II, with the population quadrupling between 1950 and 1960. Phoenix occupies a semiarid valley surrounded by mountains and irrigated fields; its economy is based on farming, manufacturing, mining, and tourism.


phoenix (US), phenix
a legendary Arabian bird said to set fire to itself and rise anew from the ashes every 500 years

Phoenix
a city in central Arizona, capital city of the state, on the Salt River. Pop.: 1 388 416 (2003 est.)

Phoenix [′fē·niks]
(astronomy)
A southern constellation; right ascension 1 hour, declination 50°S.

phoenix
fabulous Arabian bird; sings a dirge, burns itself to ashes, and rises to a new life. [Gk. Myth.: Brewer Dictionary, 699]
See : Birds

phoenix
in Middle Ages, attribute of chastity personified. [Art: Hall, 246]
See : Chastity

Phoenix
fabulous bird that consumes itself by fire every five hundred years and rises renewed from the ashes. [Arab Myth.: Brewer Dictionary, 699]
See : Fire

phoenix
fabled bird, rises from its ashes. [Gk. Legend: Brewer Dictionary, 829; Christian Symbolism: Appleton, 76]

(operating system)Phoenix - An operating system, built in BCPL on top of IBM MVT and later MVS by Cambridge University Computing Service from 1973 to 1995, which ran on the university central mainframe. All parts of the system were named after birds, including Eagle (the job scheduler, also the nearest pub), Pigeon (the mailer), GCAL (the text processor) and Wren (the command language), leading to Wren Libraries (a local pun).

Phoenix was much used by chemists in daytime and by the rest of the university in the evenings, and was only abandoned in favour of Unix in 1995; it is one reason Cambridge made little contribution to Unix until then.

Computing Service Phoenix closure memo

Phoenix 

a city in the southwestern USA, on the Salt River; the capital of Arizona. Population, 700,000 (1975; including suburbs, 1,200,000). Phoenix is an important transportation junction. As of 1974, 85,000 people were employed in the city’s industries, which include garment manufacturing, food processing (slaughtering and fruit canning), aluminum recycling, metalworking, the manufacture of chemical products, and machine building, particularly for the radio-electronics and aerospace industries. Phoenix is the center of a major irrigated farming region that produces cotton, citrus fruits, and vegetables. The city is a winter health resort. A university is located in Phoenix.


Phoenix 

an archipelago of eight atolls in the Pacific Ocean, in central Polynesia; situated between 2° 45′ and 4° 45′ S lat. and 170° 40′ and 174° 35′ W long. The largest island is Canton. The archipelago, which covers a total area of 28 sq m, has a population of about 1,000.

Before Kiribati was declared independent in 1979, most of the islands were possessions of Great Britain; Canton and Enderbury islands were administered jointly by the USA and Great Britain. Most of the islands rise 5–6 m above sea level. They are covered with coconut palms and sparse shrub vegetation. Canton has an airport for transoceanic flights.


Phoenix 

a constellation of the southern hemisphere. The brightest star of the constellation has a visual stellar magnitude of 2.4. The best time for observing Phoenix, which is visible in the southern regions of the USSR, is September and October.


Phoenix 

a genus of dioecious trees of the family Palmae. The trunks are covered with old petiole-bases and are topped by a dense crown of pinnate leaves. The anemophilous, unisexual, and trimerous flowers are in panicled inflorescences. The fruit is a berry with a single hard seed; in some species the fruit is edible.

There are more than 15 species, found in the tropics and sub-tropics of Africa and Asia. The date palm (P. dactylifera) is the oldest cultivated plant in the dry subtropical regions of North Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, southern Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan (to the right bank of the Indus River). The plant is not known to grow wild. Cultivation of the date palm was known in the seventh millennium B.C in Sumeria, Assyria, and Egypt.

The erect trunk is 15–20 m high and 80 cm in diameter; suckers form at the base. The leaves are 4–6 m long. The oblong or oval fruits, called dates, reach 7.5 cm in length and 3.5 cm in diameter. The dates contain a large number of nutrients; they are used as food by the local inhabitants and are exported. Iraq is the leading date-producing country, with a yield of approximately 350,000 tons annually. In the USSR date palms have been grown since 1939 in Turkmenia (Kizyl-Atrek), where they bear fruit despite brief frosts to – 14°C. When the trunks are tapped, a sugary sap is obtained from which wine is made; sugar is the residue produced after evaporation.

The wild date (P. sylvestris) is cultivated in India as a source of sugar. Many species are cultivated as ornamentals. The most commonly grown species in subtropical gardens and parks, including on the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus, is P. canariensis, which has a trunk reaching 12–15 m high and a crown containing 150 to 200 leaves. P. reclinata, native to tropical Africa, is found in gardens south of Sochi. Among species grown in greenhouses is the ornamental P. roblenii, native to southern Indochina.

REFERENCES

Alekseev, V. P. “Finikovaia pal’ma.” Subtropicheskie kul’tury, 1959, no. 4.

S. S. MORSHCHIKHINA


Phoenix 

a legendary bird in the mythologies of several ancient peoples. Toward the end of its long life, the phoenix immolates itself and rises alive and youthful from the ashes. The phoenix is a symbol of eternal rebirth.



Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content.
?Page tools
Printer friendly
Cite / link
Feedback
Mentioned in?   Encyclopedia browser?   Full browser?
No references found
 
 
 
Encyclopedia
?

Terms of Use | Privacy policy | Feedback | Advertise with Us | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc.
Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.