
Anne Power
et al.
Published online:
22 March 2012
Published in print:
16 March 2010
Online ISBN:
9781447302964
Print ISBN:
9781847426833
Contents
Front Matter
Page
i
-
Published:March 2010
Cite
Phoenix cities: The fall and rise of great industrial cities (Bristol , 2010; online edn, Policy Press Scholarship Online, 22 Mar. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781847426833.002.0001, accessed 22 Apr. 2025.
Extract
A phoenix is a mythical bird with a colourful plumage and a tail of gold and scarlet. It has up to a 1,000-year life cycle, near the end of which it builds itself a nest of twigs that then ignites; both nest and bird are reduced to ashes, from which a new, young phoenix is reborn. The new phoenix is destined to live as long as its old self.
Adapted from The phoenix and the carpet by E. Nesbitt, 1904; Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J.K Rowling, 2003; Wikipedia, 2010
Phoenix: (in classical mythology) a unique bird that periodically burned itself on a funeral pyre and was born again from the ashes.
Oxford English Dictionary
Subject
Urban and Rural Studies
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