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- The simurgh is the modern Persian name for a fabulous, benevolent, mythical flying creature. The simorgh is depicted in Iranian art as a winged creature in the shape of a bird, gigantic enough to carry off an elephant or a whale. It appears as a kind of peacock with the head of a dog and the claws of a lion; sometimes however also with a human face. The simorgh is inherently benevolent and unambiguously female. Being part mammal, she suckles her young. The Simorgh has teeth. It has an enmity towards snakes and its natural habitat is a place with plenty of water. Its feathers are said to be the colour of copper, and though it was originally described as being a Dog-Bird, later it was shown with either the head of a man or a dog.
- Simurghs, or the “King of Birds”, were avian creatures of Zakhara known to protect good-hearted lawful beings.
- Simurghs are one of the creatures Madam U lists off when suggesting things Anthony may be turning into in Exchanges: Heartaches[1] . Not yet seen in the comic, but implied to be a real, and very large, creature.
- Simurgh ist ein Gegner aus Final Fantasy III, man findet ihn nur mit einem der Luftschiffe im Luftraum um Dogas Schloss und westlich des Kristallturms. Als fliegender Gegner ist er schwach gegen wind-elementare Angriffe.
- The Simurgh is the wisest bird in the Universe, she knows everything and has seen the Universe end and be recreated three times. She resides in Birdland part of the year, but during the majority of the years she lives on Mount Parnassus, guarding the Tree of Seeds. She is even larger than any Roc. She communicates telepathically with humans, centaurs, and rocs.
- The simurgh is a champion creature of the Academy in Might & Magic: Heroes VII. It is the upgraded form of the arcane eagle.
- Simurgh's other names are Angha, Kerkés, Semrug, Semurg, Samran and Samru. Simurgh is a mythical, benevolent bird from Persian lore. It appears as a type of peacock with the head of a dog/human face and the claws of a lion. The simurgh is always benevolent and female. Simurgh suckles her young, has a rivalry with snakes and lives in areas with plenty of water. Iranian lore says that the Simurgh is so old she has seen the world be destroyed three times and has become so old that it accumulated all the knowledge throughout those ages. Another legend says that at 1700 years old she will burst into flame. The Simurgh was considered a purifying entity made between the earth and sky, whose role is to purify the land and waters. Simurgh makes her home in the tree Haoma and when she leaves the Hao
- Level: Mothman 9 Spell Resistance: no Calling to arms all of the mothmen you can, you all merge into a single massive hive mind greater than the planet. You grab hold of the entire Netherworld and ignite yourself, blowing the planet apart in a moth shaped fiery conflagration. As a standard action, you become colossal sized and gain a +4 bonus to your dexterity score and a +4 bonus to constitution and resistance 30 to fire and your fly speed increases by 30 feet. You also gain all of the traits of a swarm, dealing normal damage as well as damage dealt with this technique every round you stay in the same square as a creature and your distraction DC is the same as this technique's save DC. Your damage increases by +4d6 and you also deal an additional 2d6 fire damage on all damage rolls. Creat
- Simurgh (pronounced:ˌ/sɪˈmərg/; Persian: سیمرغ sɪmorγ), also spelled simorgh, simorg, simurg, simoorg, simorq or simourv, is an Iranian benevolent, mythical bird. It is sometimes equated with other mythological birds such as a "griffin" or "phoenix" (Persian: ققنوس} (which it shares several similarities with), Persian Homā Persian: هما). The figure can be found in all periods of Greater Iranian art and literature and is also evident in the iconography of Georgia, medieval Armenia, the Byzantine Empire, and other regions that were within the realm of Persian cultural influence. The name simurgh derives from Middle Persia] Pahlavi sēnmurw (and earlier sēnmuruγ), also attested in Middle Persian Pāzand as sīna-mrū. The Middle Persian term derives in turn from Avestan mərəγō Saēnō "the bird Saē
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