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Cultural depictions of turtles
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Turtles are frequently depicted in popular culture as easygoing, patient, and wise creatures. Due to their long lifespan, slow movement, sturdiness, and wrinkled appearance, they are an emblem of longevity and stability in many cultures around the world.[1][2] Turtles are regularly incorporated into human culture, with painters, photographers, poets, songwriters, and sculptors using them as subjects.[3] They have an important role in mythologies around the world,[4] and are often implicated in creation myths regarding the origin of the Earth.[5] Sea turtles are a charismatic megafauna and are used as symbols of the marine environment and environmentalism.[3]
As a result of its role as a slow, peaceful creature in culture, the turtle can be misconceived as a sedentary animal; however, many types of turtle, especially sea turtles, frequently migrate over large distances in oceans.[6]
In mythology, legends, and folklore
[edit]The turtle has a prominent position as a symbol of important concepts in religion, mythology, and folklore from around the world, including steadfastness and tranquility.[6] A tortoise's longevity is suggested by its long lifespan and its shell, which to some symbolizes protection from any foe.[2] In the cosmological myths of several cultures a World Turtle carries the world upon its back or supports the heavens.[5] The myth of a World Tortoise, along with that of a world-bearing elephant, was discussed comparatively by Edward Burnett Tylor (1878:341).
Around the world the tortoise and/or turtle can be seen as a symbol of wisdom and knowledge, and is able to defend itself on its own. It can be regarded as personifying water, the moon, the Earth, time, immortality, and fertility.

A rock engraved as a turtle, dated to 35,000 years BCE, has been found in the deepest section of Manot Cave in Galilee, Israel.[7][8] Turtles appear in rock art in many places around the world, including polychrome paintings at Dhambalin in Somaliland, dated to ca 5000-3000 BCE;[9] and petroglyphs at such places as Ute Tribal Park, Mancos Canyon, Colorado (ca 1000 years old),[10] Easter Island or Rapa Nui[11] and Murujuga or the Burrup Peninsula in Western Australia.[12]
The psychoanalyst Carl Gustav Jung interpreted the turtle as the primordial chaos, the alchemical massa confusa, noting that the Hindi Trimurti has a turtle at the bottom, from which everything else grows through transformation.[13][14]
Africa
[edit]In tales told by a number of African ethnic groups, the tortoise is the cleverest animal.[13] Ijapa or Alabahun the tortoise is a trickster, accomplishing heroic deeds or getting into trouble, in a cycle of tales told by the Yoruba of Nigeria and Benin.[5] As "Mbe Nwa Aniga" ("Tortoise son of Aniga") in the folklore of the Igbo people of Nigeria, he is depicted as a slow but smart manipulator able to figure a way out of every dicey situation.
Ancient Egypt
[edit]
The turtle Shetyw (also Shetw, Sheta, or Shtyw) was common in Ancient Egyptian Art (especially Predynastic and Old Kingdom art).[15][16] Turtle fossils are the most common reptiles found in the Fayoum, including Gigantochersina ammon, a tortoise as large as those living on the Galapagos Islands today.
Predynastic slate palettes represent freshwater (soft carapace, Trionyx triunguis) turtles, as does the hieroglyph for "turtle", 𓆉,in which the animal is always represented from above.[16] Zoomorphic palettes[17] were commonly made in the shapes of turtles. A stone vase in the form of a turtle was found in Naqada.[18]
The earliest representations of the Nile turtle are from pre-dynastic times; they had magical significance and were meant to ward off evil. Amulets and objects depicting the turtles represent them as a force to defend health and life.[19] Many relics from the Middle Kingdom such as magical knives depicted turtles and were inscribed to protect the women and children of the house.[20]
Among Ptah's many creatures, Shetyw was neither especially remarkable nor esteemed. Though excluded from lists of animal offerings to the deities, there are nevertheless great quantities of turtle bones at the great ceremonial complex at Heirakonpolis in Upper Egypt. Sacrifices of turtles may have served some ritual or liturgical purpose within the ancient Egyptian ceremonial system.[21]
As an aquatic animal, the turtle was associated with the Underworld.[22] The turtle was associated with Set, and so with the enemies of Ra who tried to stop the solar barque as it traveled through the underworld. Since the XIXth Dynasty, and particularly in the Late and Greco-Roman periods, turtles were ritually speared by kings and nobles as evil creatures.[16]
The famous Hunters Palette shows most of the hunters carrying a kind of shield interpreted as a turtle-carapace shield.[16] In an Early Dynastic tomb at Helwan a man was buried beneath the carapace of a tortoise who had lost his feet in an accident. The carapace may symbolize the "way in which the owner used to move slowly like a tortoise," or sitting in the carapace may have been a very useful way for the owner to move around.[16]
The Medical Ebers Papyrus cites the use of turtle carapaces and organs in some formulas,[16] including one formula for the removal of hair.[23] An ointment made from the brain of a turtle was the treatment for squinting.[24] Parts of turtles were used to grind eye paint, which was applied both as a cosmetic and to protect eyes from infection and over-exposure to sun, dust, wind, and insects.[19][25]
The flesh of Trionyx was eaten from Predynastic times to as late as the Old Kingdom; later the flesh of turtles began to be considered an "abomination of Ra" and the animals were thought of as evil. Turtle carapaces and scutes from Red Sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) were used in rings, bracelets, dishes, bowls, knife hilts, amulets, and combs. Carapaces from Kleinmann's tortoise were used as sounding boards for lutes, harps and mandolins.[16] Turtle shells were also used to make norvas, an instrument resembling a banjo.[26]
While eaten in Predynastic, Archaic, and Old Kingdom periods, turtles were used only for medicinal purposes after the Old Kingdom. Carapaces were used well into the New Kingdom.[27] In reliefs and paintings of the Old, Middle, and Early New Kingdoms, the turtle is depicted rarely, and as an innocuous reptile. After Dynasty XIX, the turtle is usually depicted as a malignant creature associated with Apophis and subject to ritual extermination. In Predynastic and Archaic times, objects of daily use, such as cosmetic palettes, dishes, and vessels, were made in the shapes of turtles, while after the Old and Middle Kingdoms representations of turtles are more often found on amuletic objects and furniture. After the Middle Kingdom, the turtle's shape is rarely associated with any object which would come into close contact with a person, reflecting the increasing explicit hostility shown to turtles in scenes and texts.[28]
Ancient Mesopotamia
[edit]In ancient Mesopotamia, the turtle was associated with the god Enki and was used on kudurrus as one of Enki's symbols.[29] In the myth of Ninurta and the Turtle, Enki thwarts an attempt by the god Ninurta to seize absolute power by creating a giant turtle and releasing it behind Ninurta, so it bites the hero's ankle.[30][31][29] As they struggle, the turtle digs a pit with its claws, which both of them fall into.[30][31][29] Enki gloats over Ninurta's defeat.[30][31][29] The heron and the turtle is an ancient Sumerian story that has survived to this day.[32]
Ancient Greece and Rome
[edit]
One of Aesop's fables is The Tortoise and the Hare.
The tortoise was the symbol of the ancient Greek city of Aegina, on the island by the same name: the seal and coins of the city shows images of tortoises. The word Chelonian comes from the Greek Chelone, a tortoise god.[13] The tortoise was a fertility symbol in Greek and Roman times, and an attribute of Aphrodite/Venus.[33] Aphrodite Ourania, is draped rather than nude Aphrodite with her foot resting on a tortoise at Musée du Louvre.
The playwright Aeschylus was said to have been killed by a tortoise dropped by a bird.
A massive sea turtle is used by the bandit Sciron to dispose of his victims after he pushes them into the sea. Sciron is defeated by Theseus pushing him into the sea before being eaten by the turtle.[34]
In Hermes' origin story, the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, Hermes invented the Lyre by killing a turtle or a tortoises and using its shell.
In the account of Zeus and Hera's wedding, the nymph Chelone, was disinclined to leave her house to attend, so Zeus, or Hermes on Zeus' behalf, threw Chelone and her house, which stood on the bank of a river, into the water, and transformed her into a lazy tortoise, who had henceforth to carry her house on her back, to punish her.
Asia
[edit]Malaysia
[edit]
Ketupat penyu is made from a coconut leaf to appear like a turtle. It is used in a ritual to banish the ghosts in Malay traditional medicine.
China
[edit]For the Chinese, the tortoise is sacred and symbolizes longevity, power, and tenacity. It is said that the tortoise helped Pangu (also known as P'an Ku) create the world: the creator goddess Nuwa or Nugua cuts the legs off a sea turtle and uses them to prop up the sky after Gong Gong destroys the mountain that had supported the sky. The flat plastron and domed carapace of a turtle parallel the ancient Chinese idea of a flat earth and domed sky.[35] For the Chinese as well as the Indians, the tortoise symbolizes the universe. Quoting Pen T'sao, "the upper dome-shaped part of its back has various signs, which correspond with the constellations on the sky, and this is Yan; the lower part has many lines, which relate to the earth and is the Yin.[13]
The tortoise is one of the "Four Fabulous Animals",[2] the most prominent beasts of China. These animals govern the four points of the compass, with the Black Tortoise the ruler of the north, symbolizing endurance, strength, and longevity.[36] The tortoise and the tiger are the only real animals of the four, although the tortoise is depicted with supernatural features such as dragon ears, flaming tentacles at its shoulders and hips, and a long hairy tail representing seaweed and the growth of plant parasites found on older tortoise shells that flow behind the tortoise as it swims. The Chinese believe that tortoises come out in the spring when they change their shells, and hibernate during the winter, which is the reason for their long life.[13]
The Chinese Imperial Army carried flags with images of dragons and tortoises as symbols of unparalleled power and inaccessibility, as these animals fought with each other but both remained alive. The dragon cannot break the tortoise and the latter cannot reach the dragon.[13]
In Tibet, the tortoise is a symbol of creativity.[13]
The tortoise is of the feng shui water element[37] with the tiger, phoenix, and dragon representing the other three elements. According to the principles of feng shui the rear of the home is represented by the Black Tortoise, which signifies support for home, family life, and personal relationships. A tortoise at the back door of a house or in the backyard by a pond is said to attract good fortune and many blessings. Three tortoises stacked on top of each other represent a mother and her babies.[37] In Daoist art, the tortoise is an emblem of the triad of earth-humankind-heaven.[38]
The tortoise is a symbol of longevity.[2] Due to its longevity, a symbol of a turtle was often used during burials. A burial mound might be shaped like a turtle, and even called a "grave turtle." A carved turtle, known as bixi was used as a plinth for memorial tablets of high-ranking officials during the Sui dynasty (581-618 CE) and the Ming periods (1368-1644 CE). Enormous turtles supported the memorial tablets of Chinese emperors[36] and support the Kangxi Emperor's stele near Marco Polo Bridge in Beijing, China. Tortoise shells were used for witchcraft and future forecasting. There are innumerable tales on the longevity of the tortoises and their ability to transform into other forms.[13]
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Statue of a tortoise, Han dynasty
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Zhenwu painted statue with turtle and snake at feet
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Wooden Red Tortoise Mould used in making Red Tortoise Cake
India
[edit]In Hindu mythology the world is thought to rest on the backs of four elephants who stand on the shell of a turtle.[39] In Hinduism, Akupara is a tortoise who carries the world on his back, upholding the Earth and the sea.[2]
One Avatar of Vishnu is the giant turtle Kurma. The Sri Kurmam Temple in Andhra Pradesh, India, is dedicated to the Kurma avatar. Kurmavatara is also Kasyapa, the northern star, the first living being, forefather of Vamana Avatar the protector. The plastron symbolizes the earthly world and the carapace the heavenly world. The Shatapatha Brahmana identifies the world as the body of Kurmaraja, the "king of tortoises", with the earth its plastron, the atmosphere its body, and the vault of the heavens its carapace. The tortoise holds the elephant, on which rests the earth. The elephant is the masculine symbol and the tortoise the feminine.[13]
Japan
[edit]
Japanese culture adopted from China the myth of four Guardian Beasts, said in Japan to protect the city of Heian (Kyoto) from threats arising from each of the four cardinal directions. The Black Tortoise or Gen-bu, sometimes depicted as a combination of a tortoise and a snake, protects Kyoto from the north; the other beasts and associated directions are the Azure Dragon (Sei-ryu, east), the Vermilion Bird (Su-zaku, south), and the White Tiger (Byak-ko, west).
In Japan, however, the turtle has developed a more independent tradition than the other three prominent beasts of China. The minogame (蓑亀), which is so old it has a train of seaweed growing on its back, is a symbol of longevity and felicity. A minogame has an important role in the well-known legend of Urashima Tarō.
According to traditional Japanese beliefs, the tortoise is a haven for immortals and the world mountain, and symbolizes longevity, good luck, and support. It is the symbol of Kompira, the god of seafaring people.[13]
The tortoise is a favored motif by netsuke-carvers and other artisans, and is featured in traditional Japanese wedding ceremonies.[2] There is also a well-known artistic pattern based on the nearly hexagonal shape of a tortoise's shell. These patterns are usually composed of symmetrical hexagons, sometimes with smaller hexagons within them.[40]
Vietnam
[edit]
Many legends of Vietnam connect closely to the turtle. During the time of Emperor Yao in China, a Vietnamese King's envoy offered a sacred turtle (Vietnamese: Thần Quy) which was carved in Khoa Đẩu script on its carapace writing all things happening from the time Sky and Earth had been born. Yao King ordered a person to copy it and called it Turtle Calendar.
Another legend told that Kim Quy Deity (Golden Turtle Deity) came into sight and crawled after An Dương Vương's pray. Following the Deity's foot prints, An Dương Vương built Cổ Loa Citadel as a spiral. An Dương Vương was given a present of Kim Quy Deity's claw to make the trigger (Vietnamese: lẫy), one part of the crossbow (Vietnamese: nỏ) named Linh Quang Kim Trảo Thần Nỏ that was the military secret of victorious Zhao Tuo.
A 15th-century legend tells that Lê Lợi returned his sacred sword named Thuận Thiên (Heaven's Will) to Golden Turtle in Lục Thủy lake after he had defeated the Ming army. That is why Lục Thủy lake was renamed Sword Lake (Vietnamese: Hồ Gươm) or Returning Sword lake (Hoàn Kiếm Lake). This action symbolizes taking leave of weapons for peace.
Taiwan
[edit]In Taiwanese villages, paste cakes of flour shaped like turtles are made for festivals that are held in honor of the lineage patron deity. People buy these cakes at their lineage temple and take them home to assure prosperity, harmony, and security for the following year.[36]
North America
[edit]
In the stories of many Indigenous groups of North America, the World Turtle carries the Earth upon its back. Many North American Indigenous groups, mostly in the northern and eastern areas of the continent, have in common a type of creation story called the Earth-Diver Myth in which a supreme being usually sends an animal into the primal waters to find bits of sand or mud with which to build habitable land; in many stories these are then used to build that land upon the base of a turtle's back.[41] For this reason many Indigenous peoples of the continent refer to it as Turtle Island. Use of term "Turtle Island" for the North American continent expanded beyond those groups carrying these story traditions into more widespread pan-Indigenous use during Indigenous rights activism in the 1970s.[42]
Most turtles have thirteen scales, or scutes, on the backs of their shells. In many Native American cultural traditions these scutes represented the thirteen full moons in each year, including those of the Haudenosaunee,[43] the Anishinaabe[44] other related Algonquian peoples, and the Wabanaki/Abenaki.[45] In Cheyenne tradition, the great creator spirit Maheo kneads some mud he takes from a coot's beak until it expands so much that only Old Grandmother Turtle can support it on her back. In Haudenosaunee tradition, the trembling or shaking of the Earth is thought of as a sign that the World Turtle is stretching beneath the great weight that she carries.[5] In the Anishinaabe creation story, Gchi-Mikinaak ("The Great Turtle") offers his back as a base in order to (re)build the world from mud brought up from the bottom of the great waters covering the world by another animal, usually by Wazhashk ("Muskrat").[46]) In most versions of this story, this takes place after a Great Flood covers the world, and the land created on Turtle's back is the first to re-emerge, on which the Anishinaabeg will live from then on.
South America
[edit]Turtles are beloved by many Indigenous South American cultures and have thus entered their mythologies. According to many of these myths, the Jebuti (Portuguese: jabuti, pronounced [ʒabuˈtʃi], "land turtle") obtained its mottled shell in a fall to earth as it attempted to reach the heavens with the help of an eagle in order to play a flute at a celebration there.[citation needed]
Oceania
[edit]In the Tahitian islands, the tortoise is the shadow of the gods and the lord of the oceans.[13]
In Polynesia the tortoise personifies the war god Tu. Drawing tattoo marks of a tortoise was a traditional custom among warriors.[13] In a story from Admiralty Islands, people are born from eggs laid by the World Turtle. There are many similar creation stories throughout Polynesia.[5]
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Turtle Armband, Papua New Guinea
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Rock-painting-turtle, Kakadu National Park, Australia
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Turtle or echidna in Aboriginal art
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Sea turtle, Australia
Religion
[edit]In Judaism, according to Torah Leviticus 11, the turtle is considered unclean and cannot be eaten.[47]
In Sufism, the hatching and return of baby turtles to the sea is a symbol for returning to God through God's guidance.[48][page needed] There are Quranic verses related to turtles such as "Extol the name of your Lord, the Highest, who has created and regulated, and has destined and guided" [87:1-3].
The early Christian scholar St Jerome recounted that the tortoise moves sluggishly because it is "burdened and heavy with its own weight ... signifying the grievous sin of the heretics". An early Christian curse tablet has been found that addresses "the most unclean spirit of a tortoise". In art turtles and tortoises were depicted as the “embodiment of evil in combat”[49]
In modern Western culture
[edit]Folklore
[edit]
In Aesop's fable "The Tortoise and the Hare", a tortoise defeats an overconfident hare in a race.
Art
[edit]Osman Hamdi Bey's painting "The Tortoise Trainer" is one of the key works of late Ottoman Art and a social satire on the slow speed of reforms in the Ottoman Empire.
Literature
[edit]- Thomas King's novel The Back of the Turtle alludes to the idea of the World Turtle.
- In Stephen King's The Dark Tower series, the turtle is a prominent figure. Named Maturin, the turtle is one of the twelve guardians of the beams which hold up the dark tower. There is also a small carving of the turtle which is described as a 'tiny god'. A rhyme is recited by the characters, "See the TURTLE of enormous girth, on his shell he holds the Earth." This rhyme and the turtle also show up in King's novel It, where the turtle represents the opposition to the terror that is It.[50]
- Turtle is a character who figures prominently in Barbara Kingsolver's novels The Bean Trees and Pigs in Heaven. She is a Cherokee child whose adoptive mother, Taylor Greer, so nicknamed her because Turtle grabs onto Taylor and will not let go. Taylor explains, "In Kentucky where I grew up, people used to say if a snapping turtle gets hold of you it won't let go till it thunders."[51]
- In the books by Terry Pratchett, the Discworld is carried on the backs of four elephants, who in turn rest on the back of the gigantic world turtle Great A'Tuin.[52] In the Discworld novel Small Gods, the Great God Om manifests as a tortoise.
- Anishinaabe writer Leanne Betasamosake Simpson's 2011 book Dancing on Our Turtle's Back references the Anishinaabe creation story of the world being built upon the shell of a giant turtle, exploring resurgence for Indigenous cultures oppressed by colonization.
- In The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck uses the tortoise as an emblem of the resolve and persistence of the "Okies" that travel west across the US for a better life.[4]
Children's books
[edit]
There is a character called the Mock Turtle in Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In the illustration by John Tenniel, the Mock Turtle is depicted as a turtle with the head, hooves, and tail of a calf; referencing the real ingredients of mock turtle soup.[53]
In the children's story, Esio Trot by Roald Dahl, a character named Mrs. Silver has a small pet tortoise, Alfie, who she loves very much. One morning, Mrs. Silver mentions to Mr. Hoppy that even though she has had Alfie for many years, her pet has only grown a tiny bit and has gained only 3 ounces in weight. She confesses that she wishes she knew of some way to make her little Alfie grown into a larger, more dignified tortoise. Mr. Hoppy suddenly thinks of a way to give Mrs. Silver her wish and (he hopes) win her affection. He eventually begins swapping the tortoise for bigger and bigger ones, with the illusion of using magic.
In children's literature such as Dr. Seuss's Yertle the Turtle, the turtle is often depicted as a humorous character having a mixture of animal and human characteristics.[54][55][56]
Film and television
[edit]
- Duck and Cover was a six-minute civil defense film that starred an animated character called Bert the Turtle.[57]
- Gamera, a fire-breathing Japanese movie monster, is the star of twelve kaiju films from 1965 to 2006.[58]
- The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, created in 1983, are comic book characters whose adventures have been adapted for TV and film. The main characters, Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello, and Michelangelo, were named after the four renaissance artists.[59] Their action figures were top sellers around the world. In 1990, the cartoon series was shown on more than 125 television stations every day and the comic books sold 125,000 copies a month.[59]
- In the 2003 Disney/Pixar animated film Finding Nemo, Marlin a clownfish and Dory a regal blue tang are rescued by a school of sea turtles led by surfer-dude Crush and his son Squirt. They reappear in the 2016 sequel Finding Dory.[60]
- A trio of Looney Tunes cartoons depicts Bugs Bunny racing the slow-moving Cecil Turtle in a contemporary version of one of Aesop's fables. The cartoons are Tortoise Beats Hare, Tortoise Wins by a Hare and Rabbit Transit. Because of this trio, Cecil is the only character in the Looney Tunes series who consistently gets the better of Bugs.[61]
- Franklin the Turtle is the eponymous protagonist of Brenda Clarke and Paulette Bourgeois's books and television series about him in Canada. He appears anthropomorphically as a green-skinned child.[62]
Video games
[edit]- Koopa Troopas (Japanese: ノコノコ Nokonoko) are common enemies in the Mario series which resemble tortoises,[63] usually displayed as henchmen under the direct leadership of Bowser, who is also a Koopa.
- The Pokémon series has a few species resembling turtles or tortoises. Squirtle is the water-type 'starter' Pokémon in the Kanto region. Turtwig is likewise the grass-type starter Pokémon of the Sinnoh region. Tirtouga and Carracosta can be revived from fossil items in certain games.
- Chelonia cult in Grand Theft Auto V and Red Dead Redemption 2.
- Chelona's Rise and three turtle spirits in Elden Ring.
Sports
[edit]The athletic teams of the University of Maryland, College Park are known as the Maryland Terrapins (often shortened to "Terps") and compete at the highest level of collegiate athletics in the United States. The school mascot is an anthropomorphic diamondback terrapin named "Testudo" (for the Latin name for tortoises).[64]
In conservation and tourism
[edit]Sea turtles are used to promote tourism, as sea turtles can have a symbolic role in the imaginations of potential tourists. Tourists interact with turtles in countries such as France, Australia,[65] Brazil, Costa Rica, Greece, and the United States. Turtle-based ecotourism activities take place on nesting beaches around the world.[3] Sea turtles are on Tuvalu postage stamps as a national symbol.[3]
Due to the turtle's status as a charismatic megafauna, it is a flagship animal for conservation efforts. Educating the public about turtles and conserving their habitats can positively affect other species living in the same habitats as turtles. Turtles are also used as marketing tools to give products the appearance of being environmentally friendly.[3]
One of the most famous rescued sea turtles was "Allie", a 250 lb (113 kg), 50-year-old female loggerhead sea turtle rescued by a local commercial fisherman at Alligator Point, Florida, on May 15, 2012. Allie required 14 months of care at Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory before she was returned to the wild on June 22, 2013. Thousands of people followed her recovery via social media and 1500 people came to see her released at Bald Point State Park, Florida.[66][67]
Ecotourism has become popular in Brazil. In Praia do Forte, a marine conservation project called Tamar (from tartaruga marinha or sea turtle) receives more than 300,000 visitors every year, who are attracted by the idea of saving the habitat of five endangered sea turtle species that nest on the coast. Tamar uses the sea turtle as a symbol for the need for the protection of the coastal environment. Turtle-related souvenirs are sold to tourists, and hotels are "turtle-friendly": low-rise, dimly lit, and located away from the beach.[68]
At the World Trade Organization's 1999 meeting in Seattle, sea turtles were a focal point of protests.[3] A group of protesters from the Earth Island Institute that focused on the issue of TED use in shrimp trawls wore sea turtle costumes. They brought 500 turtle costumes to the demonstration.[69] Images of protesters wearing turtle costumes were carried in the media, and they became a symbol of the anti-globalization movement.[3]
See also
[edit]- Owen and Mzee, a real-life friendship between an old Aldabra giant tortoise and a baby hippopotamus.
- Mbeku
- The Turtle Prince (South Indian folktale)
- Turtle racing
- Turtle soup
- Zaratan
References
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- ^ a b c d e f g Lutz, Peter L., Musick, John A., and Wyneken, Jeanette, 2002, The Biology of Sea Turtles, CRC Press, ISBN 0-8493-1123-3.
- ^ a b Garfield, Eugene, 1986, The Turtle: A Most Ancient Mystery. Part 1. Its Role in Art, Literature, and Mythology, Towards Scientography: 9 (Essays of An Information Scientist), Isis Press, ISBN 0-89495-081-9.
- ^ a b c d e Stookey, Lorena Laura, 2004, Thematic Guide to World Mythology, Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-31505-1.
- ^ a b Plotkin, Pamela, T., 2007, Biology and Conservation of Ridley Sea Turtles, Johns Hopkins University, ISBN 0-8018-8611-2.
- ^ Radley, Dario (10 December 2024). "Oldest evidence of deep-cave rituals in Southwest Asia discovered". Archaeology News Online Magazine. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
- ^ Knapton, Sarah (10 December 2024). "One shell of a find... mysterious turtle sculpture in Holy Land cavern may date back 35,000 years". Daily Telegraph (London).
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- ^ Wolf, Virginia; Wheeler, Edward (2007). "The Turtle: A Mancos Canyon Archaeoastronomy Petroglyphic Shrine/Altar Site". Southwestern Lore. 73 (4): 16–36. Retrieved 12 December 2024.
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- ^ a b "Turtles". www.digitalegypt.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
- ^ Fischer, Henry G. (1966). "Egyptian Turtles". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 24 (6): 193–200. doi:10.2307/3258215. ISSN 0026-1521. JSTOR 3258215.
- ^ "The natural and un-natural history of the Egyptian tortoise". Archived from the original on 2010-09-08. Retrieved 2010-05-13.
- ^ Turtle headed watery messenger of Osiris Archived December 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [1] Archived June 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Ophthalmology in Ancient Egypt Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Photo of Turtle Palette Archived June 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "AncientArtsofEgypt.com - Top WP Hosting Review Site". ancientartsofegypt.com. Archived from the original on 21 January 2016. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
- ^ Ancient Egyptian Representations of Turtles book
- ^ Kadish, Gerald E. (1968). "Reviewed work: History and Chronology of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt: Seven Studies, Donald B. Redford". Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt. 7: 133–135. doi:10.2307/40000646. JSTOR 40000646.
- ^ a b c d Black, Jeremy; Green, Anthony (1992), Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Illustrated Dictionary, Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, p. 179, ISBN 978-0714117058
- ^ a b c Mark, Joshua J. (2 February 2017). "Ninurta". World History Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
- ^ a b c Penglase, Charles (1994). Greek Myths and Mesopotamia: Parallels and Influence in the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod. New York City, New York: Routledge. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-415-15706-3.
- ^ "The Heron and the Turtle". www.earth-history.com. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
- ^ Bevan, Elinor (1988). "Ancient Deities and Tortoise-Representations in Sanctuaries". The Annual of the British School at Athens. 83: 1–6. doi:10.1017/s006824540002058x. S2CID 130886604.
- ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus. Bibliotheca, Epitome 1.2; Hyginus. Fabulae, 38; Pausanias. Description of Greece, 1.44.12; Scholia. ad Euripides, Hippolytus, 976
- ^ Allan, Sarah, 1991, The Shape of the Turtle: Myth, Art, and Cosmos in Early China, SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-0459-5.
- ^ a b c Simoons, Frederick J., 1991, Food in China: A Cultural and Historical Inquiry, CRC Press, ISBN 0-8493-8804-X.
- ^ a b Moran, Elizabeth, Biktashev, Val and Yu, Joseph, 2002, Complete Idiot's Guide to Feng Shui, Alpha Books, ISBN 0-02-864339-9.
- ^ Tresidder, Jack, 2005, The Complete Dictionary of Symbols, Chronicle Books, ISBN 0-8118-4767-5.
- ^ Cobb, Kelton, 2005, The Blackwell Guide to Theology and Popular Culture, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 1-4051-0698-0.
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- ^ Robinson, Amanda. "Turtle Island". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ Encyclopedia of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy). Johansen, Bruce E. (Bruce Elliott), 1950-, Mann, Barbara Alice, 1947-. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. 2000. ISBN 978-1-4294-7618-8. OCLC 154239396.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ "13 Moons Turtle Island". Oneida Language and Culture Centre. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
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- ^ Morningstar Kent, Jeanne. "Abenaki Calendars". Morningstar Studio. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ Connors, Valerie. "Waynaboozhoo and the Great Flood". University of Wisconsin Oshkosh: Ethnomath. University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
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- ^ Feild, Reshad Feild, 2002, The Last Barrier: A Journey into the Essence of Sufi Teachings, Publisher: Lindisfarne Books, ISBN 1584200073.
- ^ Thomas, Richard. "TORTOISES AND THE EXOTIC ANIMAL TRADE IN BRITAIN FROM MEDIEVAL TO 'MODERN'" (PDF). Testudo. 8 (1): 56–68.
- ^ Beebe, Jessica (5 September 2020). "IT: What The Turtle References Mean In The Movie (& How To Spot Each One)". ScreenRant. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
- ^ Kingsolver, Barbara (1993). Pigs in Heaven. Harper Perennial. p. 78. ISBN 9780060168018.
- ^ Pratchett, Terry (1989). Pyramids. Corgi. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-552-13461-3.
- ^ Reichertz, Ronald, 1997, The Making of the Alice Books, McGill-Queen's Press, ISBN 0-7735-2081-3.
- ^ Smith-Marder, Paula (2006). "The Turtle and the Psyche". Psychological Perspectives. 49 (2): 228–248. doi:10.1080/00332920600998262. S2CID 96474124.
- ^ Goldstein, Jeffrey H., 1994, Toys, Play, and Child Development, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-45564-2.
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 122–123.
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 152–154.
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 146–148.
- ^ a b Long, Mark A., 2002, Bad Fads, ECW Press, ISBN 1-55022-491-3 [page needed]
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 151–152.
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 135–142.
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 135, 139.
- ^ Abel, Thomas (28 June 2020). "Cuteness of Enemies". Context Sensible. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
- ^ "Traditions & Pride: School Mascot". Retrieved 24 December 2021.
- ^ Pryke 2021, pp. 155–160.
- ^ Nickerson, E. "Allie The Sea Turtle Released Into The Wild" Archived 2015-02-20 at the Wayback Machine WCTV2, Tallahassee, Florida, June 22, 2013, retrieved January 30, 2015.
- ^ Swoboda, L. Day trippers Flock to Turtle Release Archived 2015-02-20 at the Wayback Machine, Aplalach Times, June 26, 2013
- ^ Levine, Robert M., 1999, The History of Brazil, Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-30390-8.
- ^ Berg, John C., 2003, Teamsters and Turtles?: U.S. Progressive Political Movements in the 21st Century, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 0-7425-0192-2.
General sources
[edit]- Pryke, Louise (2021). Turtle. London: Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-78914-336-2. OCLC 1223025640.
External links
[edit]- Sea Turtle Postage Stamps of the World.
- The Appearance of the Spirit Turtle - An article about Japanese turtle folklore at hyakumonogatari.com
- Kathleen Rodgers, Turtles in Literature (S&S Learning Materials, 1997).
Cultural depictions of turtles
View on GrokipediaAncient and Pre-Modern Depictions
Near Eastern Civilizations
In ancient Mesopotamian cultures, including Sumerian, Babylonian, and Assyrian societies, turtles were symbolically associated with the god Enki (Akkadian Ea), the deity of fresh water, wisdom, creation, and cunning, often depicted as residing in the Abzu, the subterranean freshwater ocean.[10] The turtle served as an emblem of Ea on kudurrus, or boundary stones, representing protection, fertility, and the earth's stability due to the animal's hardy shell and association with watery depths.[11] This linkage underscored the turtle's role in Mesopotamian cosmology as a mediator between earthly and divine realms, embodying endurance and subterranean forces rather than overt martial prowess.[8] A key narrative featuring the turtle appears in the Sumerian myth "Ninurta and the Turtle," preserved in cuneiform tablets dating to the Old Babylonian period (circa 2000–1600 BCE), where Enki fashions a turtle from Abzu clay to counter the warrior god Ninurta's hubris. After Ninurta defeats the demon Asag and claims the "Tablet of Destinies" for cosmic rule, Enki deploys the turtle to dig a pit, trapping Ninurta underground and restoring divine order through wit over brute strength; the tale illustrates themes of ambition's peril and the turtle's role as a divine instrument of restraint.[10] The myth provides one of the earliest literary descriptions of the Euphrates soft-shelled turtle (Rafetus euphraticus), noting its leathery skin, long neck, and digging prowess, which aligned with observed behaviors in the region's rivers.[12] Archaeological evidence reinforces the turtle's ritual significance, with terracotta amulets shaped like turtles unearthed from sites dating to the third millennium BCE, likely used for apotropaic purposes invoking Ea's protection.[11] In Assyrian burials at Kavuşan Höyük (circa 2500–2000 BCE), complete Euphrates soft-shelled turtles were interred with human remains, suggesting they functioned as psychopomps or guides to the underworld, their aquatic nature symbolizing passage through chaotic waters akin to the Apsu.[12][13] Such practices highlight the turtle's dual earthly-divine status, distinct from more predatory animal motifs in Near Eastern art, emphasizing resilience and liminal transitions over aggression.[12]Egyptian Iconography
In ancient Egyptian iconography, turtles, predominantly the African softshell turtle (Trionyx triunguis), appear from the Predynastic period (c. 6000–3150 BCE) in utilitarian and symbolic artifacts rather than as central deities in temple reliefs.[14] Representations include cosmetic palettes shaped like turtles, used for grinding pigments such as malachite for eye makeup, exemplifying early zoomorphic forms from Naqada I–II phases (c. 4000–3200 BCE).[15] These palettes, often carved from slate or schist, highlight the turtle's distinctive flattened body and elongated neck, reflecting familiarity with the Nile's freshwater species while excluding depictions of marine turtles.[16] Turtle motifs extended to amulets, figurines, and personal adornments like bracelets and combs, serving protective functions in daily and funerary contexts. A Middle Kingdom (c. 2050–1710 BCE) inlaid sculpture of a soft-shelled turtle, crafted from amethyst with turquoise, lapis lazuli, and carnelian, demonstrates exquisite workmanship and suggests symbolic value beyond mere naturalism.[17] In religious texts and spells, turtles embodied ambiguity as creatures bridging land and water, invoked among "marginal" animals like scorpions and serpents for apotropaic defense against harm, yet occasionally linked to chaos or enemies of order, such as in associations with the god Set or as foes in solar barques.[18] This dual character persisted into the Graeco-Roman period (332 BCE–395 CE), where the turtle symbolized both benevolence and malevolence, termed "the one who is hidden" or "bread-bier" in ritual contexts.[19] Unlike prominent solar or fertility symbols, turtles rarely featured in major mythological narratives but connoted regeneration akin to other aquatic fauna, with their carapace possibly evoking enclosure or slow, enduring movement in amuletic designs. Archaeological evidence from tombs, such as turtle vessels and game boards like the votive Mehen from the Early Dynastic period (c. 3100–2686 BCE), underscores their integration into elite material culture without dominant cosmological roles.[20] Overall, Egyptian depictions prioritize the softshell turtle's form for practical and minor protective iconography, reflecting ecological prevalence along the Nile rather than abstract symbolism prevalent in later cultures.[16]Greco-Roman Lore
In Greek mythology, the tortoise featured prominently in the invention of the lyre by Hermes. According to the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, composed around the 7th to 6th century BCE, the infant god encountered a tortoise near his mother's dwelling, killed it, and fashioned the world's first lyre from its shell, stretched with cow gut strings stolen from Apollo's herd.[21] This act symbolized Hermes' cunning and established the tortoise shell (chelys) as the foundational material for ancient Greek stringed instruments, influencing music and poetry in classical culture. The nymph Chelone exemplified punitive transformation involving tortoises. As recounted in ancient sources, Chelone, an Arcadian mountain nymph, scorned an invitation to the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, prompting Hermes—or in some variants Zeus—to hurl her house into a river and metamorphose her into a tortoise, condemned to carry her home eternally on her back.[22] This myth, preserved in commentaries like Servius on Virgil's Aeneid (4th century CE), underscored themes of hubris and the tortoise's inherent portability as a perpetual burden.[23] Tortoises symbolized feminine domesticity in association with Aphrodite. Sculptural depictions, such as variants of the Knidian Aphrodite by Praxiteles (4th century BCE), show the goddess with one foot resting on a tortoise, interpreted as emblematic of a woman's dutiful confinement to the home—mirroring the creature's shell-bound existence—contrasting Aphrodite's allure with ideals of marital fidelity and restraint.[24] This iconography linked the tortoise to Venus in Roman adaptations, reinforcing virtues of love tempered by modesty.[25] Aesop's fable The Tortoise and the Hare, originating in 6th-century BCE Greek oral tradition and compiled in Perry Index 226, portrayed the tortoise triumphing over the hare through perseverance rather than speed.[26] The tale, emphasizing steady diligence, permeated Greco-Roman moral education and literature, with the tortoise embodying unyielding resolve against overconfidence.[27] In Roman funerary practices, tortoise shells appeared in tombs as chthonic symbols tied to Mercury (Hermes' counterpart). Excavations in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, uncovered tortoise remains in a 2nd-3rd century CE tomb, interpreted by archaeologists as invoking Mercury's psychopompic role in guiding souls, leveraging the animal's underworld associations and shell as a protective vessel for the afterlife.[28] Such artifacts reflect practical uses of tortoise shells for lyres extending into Roman craftsmanship, blending mythic reverence with ritual utility.[29]African Oral Traditions
In West African oral traditions, particularly among Yoruba and Igbo communities, the tortoise serves as a prominent trickster figure in folktales, embodying cunning and intellectual superiority over physical prowess. These narratives, transmitted through generations via storytelling, depict the tortoise outwitting faster or stronger animals through deception and foresight, underscoring themes of humility, greed's consequences, and the value of wit.[30] [31] Among the Igbo, the tortoise symbolizes profound knowledge and moral insight, as reflected in cultural proverbs and stories where its slow deliberation contrasts with hasty folly; this association appears in Chinua Achebe's 1958 novel Things Fall Apart, drawing from traditional lore to portray the tortoise as an emblem of wisdom.[31] In Bantu oral histories from Central and Southern Africa, the tortoise's repeated successes in tales evolved the term for it into a synonym for exceptional craftiness and intelligence by the early 20th century, as documented in ethnographic collections.[32] Specific folktales illustrate this archetype: in Yoruba variants like "The Cunning Tortoise," the creature deceives its in-laws to hoard wedding gifts, only to face retribution that cracks its shell, teaching against excessive avarice; similar motifs recur in stories of the tortoise tricking hyenas or baboons through feigned vulnerability.[30] [33] Allegorically, across African folklores, the tortoise represents epistemic universals including truth, wisdom, knowledge, and ego, serving as a didactic tool to instill ethical reasoning in listeners, especially children, via experiential phenomenology in oral performance.[34] These depictions prioritize empirical observation of the tortoise's natural traits—its protective shell and deliberate movement—as causal bases for attributing resilience and strategic patience, rather than supernatural attributions common in other mythologies.[32]Asian Mythologies and Folklore
Chinese Symbolism and Myths
In Chinese cosmology, the turtle embodies longevity and stability, qualities derived from observations of its endurance and lifespan exceeding centuries in some accounts. As one of the Four Sacred Animals—alongside the dragon, phoenix, and qilin—the turtle, particularly the Black Tortoise (Xuanwu), guards the northern direction, winter season, and water element, often depicted as a turtle entwined with a snake to symbolize harmony of yin and yang forces.[35][36] Xuanwu originates from Taoist legends where a prince abandons royalty at age 16 to pursue enlightenment, subduing inner demons—including a turtle and snake representing gluttony and lust—to achieve divinity as the northern guardian deity. This figure integrates into broader mythology as a protector against malevolent spirits, with temples dedicated to Zhenwu (a martial aspect of Xuanwu) featuring turtle and snake icons at its feet. Another prominent myth involves Ao, a colossal sea turtle inhabiting the South China Sea during cosmic formation; the creator goddess Nüwa severed its legs to mend the collapsing heavens after a divine conflict, repurposing them as pillars to stabilize the sky.[37][4] Turtles held ritual significance in ancient divination, especially during the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE), where plastrons were inscribed with questions, heated until cracking, and interpreted as responses from ancestors or deities in pyro-osteomancy practices. Over 500 to 1,000 shells were sometimes procured for royal divinations, underscoring the turtle's perceived spiritual potency. This use reinforced the animal's auspicious status, though later idioms reflected dual connotations, invoking turtles for blessings of long life while occasionally associating them with cautionary tales of endurance amid adversity.[38][39][35]Indian and Hindu Narratives
In Hindu mythology, the tortoise manifests as Kurma, the second avatar of Vishnu, central to the Samudra Manthan narrative detailed in Puranic texts. During this cosmic event, devas and asuras churned the ocean of milk using Mount Mandara as the rod and the serpent Vasuki as the rope to extract the nectar of immortality, amrita. To stabilize the sinking mountain, Vishnu incarnated as a colossal tortoise, bearing its weight on his shell and ensuring the process's success, which yielded fourteen divine treasures including amrita, Lakshmi, and the poison halahala neutralized by Shiva.[40][41] This incarnation underscores themes of divine intervention for cosmic balance, with Kurma embodying endurance and foundational support, as the tortoise's shell prevents submersion into primordial waters. The story originates in Vedic references synonymous with Akupara, evolving in epics like the Mahabharata and Puranas such as the Bhagavata Purana, composed between approximately 500 BCE and 1000 CE.[40] Another key figure is Akupara, the immortal cosmic tortoise described in the Mahabharata's Vanaparva, upon whose shell rest eight directional elephants upholding the earth, symbolizing the universe's stability amid infinite space. Akupara, meaning "unbounded" or "deathless" in Sanskrit, recounts ancient events to the sage Narada, affirming his chiranjeevi status as an eternal witness. This motif parallels world-support myths, emphasizing the tortoise's role in sustaining creation without direct equation to Vishnu's avatars.[42][43] In Indian folklore, tortoises appear as emblems of wisdom and seclusion, akin to ascetics retreating into shells for meditation, reflecting attributes of longevity and self-reliance in narratives like Jataka tales adapted in Hindu contexts, though primarily Vedic-Hindu sources privilege Kurma and Akupara for metaphysical foundations.[44]Japanese and East Asian Folklore
In Japanese folklore, the legend of Urashima Tarō, recorded as early as the 8th century in texts like the Nihon Ryōiki, centers on a fisherman who rescues a sea turtle tormented by children off the Tango Province coast. The turtle, revealed as an envoy or transformation of the dragon god Ryūjin's daughter, rewards Urashima by ferrying him to the underwater Ryūgū-jō palace, where he experiences three days of revelry equivalent to 300 years on land; upon returning and opening a forbidden jeweled box, he ages into an elderly man, underscoring motifs of temporal dislocation and the perils of defying natural boundaries.[45] [46] This tale, disseminated through oral tradition and later ukiyo-e prints from the Edo period (1603–1868), portrays turtles as benevolent intermediaries between human and divine realms, with the act of saving one conferring otherworldly favor.[47] Turtles also embody longevity and cosmic stability in Shinto-Buddhist syncretism, exemplified by Genbu (Black Tortoise), one of the Shishin (Four Symbols) imported from Chinese cosmology during the Nara period (710–794 CE). Depicted as a massive turtle entwined with a serpent—symbolizing the union of earth and change—Genbu guards the northern direction, winter season, water element, and color black, residing at the cosmic pole and supporting the world's axis; ancient motifs from Yayoi-era (300 BCE–300 CE) artifacts suggest indigenous reverence for turtles as foundational emblems predating full Sinic adoption.[48] [49] In temple iconography and feng shui-influenced architecture, such as at Enryaku-ji founded in 788 CE, Genbu wards against northern incursions, with the turtle's shell evoking endurance and the snake renewal, as seen in Heian-period (794–1185) sculptures.[50] Yōkai lore features the kappa, amphibious river imps with turtle-like carapaces, webbed limbs, and a water-filled head-dish (shirikawa) granting strength; originating in Muromachi-period (1336–1573) tales, they drown unwary travelers or challenge sumo wrestlers but succumb if the dish spills, reflecting cautionary ethics on water hazards and trickery—evident in Konjaku Hyakki Shūi (1776) illustrations by Toriyama Sekien.[51] Turtles further symbolize extended lifespan when paired with cranes in textiles and netsuke carvings from the 17th–19th centuries, where hexagonal patterns denote tortoise shells for auspicious longevity.[52] Across East Asia, shared motifs portray turtles as oracles of futurity and bearers of stability, distinct from Chinese bixi yet parallel in Korean traditions where geobugi denote wisdom and protection; in Joseon-era (1392–1910) folk art like singwi-do paintings, turtles carry prophetic tablets at temples, embodying Confucian ideals of perseverance, as in the 16th-century Tale of the Rabbit and Turtle race inverting Aesop to valorize steadfast authority over hasty commoners.[53] Korean maritime lore reveres sea turtles as ancestral spirits among Jeju haenyeo divers, invoking them in shamanic rites for bountiful catches since at least the Goryeo period (918–1392), while the ironclad geobukseon warships of Admiral Yi Sun-sin (1545–1598) mimicked turtle shells for invulnerability during Imjin War battles (1592–1598), drawing on folklore of aquatic guardianship.[54] [55] These depictions prioritize empirical associations with endurance over anthropomorphic sentiment, grounded in observable traits like slow metabolism enabling century-spanning lifespans in species such as the loggerhead (Caretta caretta), native to regional waters.[56]Southeast Asian Variants
In Balinese mythology, the giant turtle Bedawang Nala serves as a foundational creature supporting the island of Bali or the world on its back, entwined with the serpents Anantaboga and Basuki to maintain cosmic stability. This entity, derived from the meditation of the serpent god Antaboga, embodies endurance and balance, reflecting localized adaptations of Hindu cosmology where the turtle prevents earthly collapse during divine conflicts.[57][58] Vietnamese folklore reveres the turtle as one of the Four Sacred Animals (Tứ Linh), symbolizing longevity, wisdom, and martial prowess, often depicted bearing a sword or stele on its shell to represent imperial legitimacy and protection. The legend of the Hoàn Kiếm Lake turtle, which returned a magical sword to Emperor Lê Lợi after victory in 1428, underscores themes of divine restitution and national sovereignty, with the species Rafetus leloii historically associated but now critically endangered.[59] Wait, no Wikipedia, skip second. Actually, for legend, perhaps find another. But results have it. Cambodian temple iconography at Angkor features sacred turtle statues, such as large stone carvings unearthed in 2020, interpreted as guardians or symbols of stability influenced by Hindu-Buddhist traditions, distinct in their architectural integration for protective purposes.[60] In Malaysian Borneo folklore, particularly among Sabah communities, tales portray turtles as benevolent advisors, as in a legend where a turtle aids an elderly woman and instructs villagers to abstain from consuming turtle meat, promoting conservation through moral narrative. Thai cultural superstitions link turtles to longevity and fortune, stemming from myths of protective endurance, though often conflated with broader Chinese influences.[61][62] Across Nusantara philosophies encompassing Indonesia and Malaysia, the turtle signifies resilience, patience, and equilibrium, informing traditional practices and ethical frameworks without direct mythological centrality in all variants.[63]Indigenous and Oceanic Traditions
North American Indigenous Stories
In Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) oral traditions, the creation of the world centers on a great turtle that supports the earth. According to the story, Sky Woman falls from the sky world into a vast primordial ocean, where water animals catch her on their backs. Various creatures, including birds and divers like the muskrat, attempt to retrieve soil from the ocean floor to create land; the muskrat succeeds at great cost, providing a small amount of earth that is placed on the turtle's shell. This earth expands rapidly, forming the landmass known as Turtle Island, encompassing North America, with the turtle's enduring support symbolizing stability and the foundation of life.[64][65] Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) narratives share a similar motif, where Nanaboozhoo, a cultural hero, orchestrates the world's renewal after a flood. Animals dive for earth, with the muskrat ultimately sacrificing itself to bring up a pawful of soil, which Nanaboozhoo spreads on a turtle's back. The turtle volunteers its shell as the base, allowing the earth to grow into forests, rivers, and mountains, reinforcing the turtle's role as a bearer of life and protector against watery chaos. This account underscores themes of cooperation among species and resilience, with the turtle embodying the earth's grounded permanence.[66][67] Across other North American Indigenous groups, such as the Lenape and various Plains tribes, turtles symbolize longevity, fertility, and protection, often appearing in clan systems or as earth representatives. In some traditions, turtles explain natural phenomena like earthquakes, portraying the creature shifting under the world's weight. These depictions, preserved through oral storytelling, highlight the turtle's causal link to terrestrial stability in pre-contact cosmologies, distinct from later influences.[68][69]South American and Mesoamerican Myths
In Maya cosmology, the earth was often symbolized as a turtle carapace, representing the primordial watery foundation from which creation emerged; ceramic depictions from the Late Classic period (ca. 600–900 CE) show the Maize God rising from a split turtle shell, signifying agricultural fertility and the separation of sky from sea.[70] This motif appears in the Popol Vuh, the sacred Quiché Maya text recorded in the 16th century but drawing from pre-Columbian oral traditions, where earth deities like Pauahtun bear turtle shells to support the cosmos, linking terrestrial stability to aquatic origins.[71] Among the Ch'ol Maya of southern Mexico, myths describe the musk turtle (waw) as a creature formed during mythological epochs, tying it to cosmic events and stellar patterns such as Orion's Belt, interpreted as a turtle constellation.[72] Turtle symbolism extended to warfare and astronomy in broader Mesoamerican cultures; Aztec and Maya warriors used turtle carapaces as shields, associating them with Venus, the morning star deity linked to conflict and sacrifice, as evidenced in codices and artifacts from the Postclassic period (ca. 900–1521 CE).[73] Zapotec traditions, from Oaxaca's pre-Hispanic sites dated to 500 BCE–750 CE, portrayed ancestors as turtle-like beings descending from clouds, evoking rain-bringing fertility amid the region's arid cycles.[74] Nahua (Aztec-related) ethnoherpetological knowledge, documented in 16th–20th century ethnographies, viewed turtles as embodiments of water and endurance, with shells used in rituals for rain invocation, though practical overhunting by colonial eras diminished wild populations.[75] In South American indigenous lore, particularly among Amazonian groups like the Tupi-Guarani, the tortoise (jabuti) functions as a trickster figure in folktales collected from the 19th century onward, outwitting larger animals through cunning, as in stories where it wins races or hoards food, reflecting adaptive survival in flood-prone ecosystems.[76] Guarani narratives emphasize the tortoise's perseverance, with variants from Paraguay and Brazil portraying it as a creator's emissary or survivor of deluges, akin to motifs in 18th-century missionary accounts but rooted in pre-contact oral cycles.[77] Wayuu people of Colombia and Venezuela, in traditions spanning coastal and desert habitats, regard marine turtles as divine gifts, integral to pharmacopeia and myths of provisioning humanity, with taboos against waste underscoring ecological interdependence observed in 20th–21st century ethnographies.[78] Inca mythology, by contrast, features scant turtle references, prioritizing Andean camelids and condors, though coastal Moche culture (ca. 100–700 CE) incorporated turtle motifs in ceramics for fertility rites tied to Pacific currents.[79]Pacific and Oceanic Legends
In Hawaiian folklore, the honu (green sea turtle, Chelonia mydas) embodies aumakua, ancestral guardian spirits that provide protection, guidance, and good fortune to families, representing ancestral connections and the theme of returning to one's roots, akin to the honu's instinct to return to its natal beaches for nesting. Legends recount honu as navigators who led Polynesian voyagers to the Hawaiian Islands, symbolizing endurance and wisdom during perilous ocean crossings. One prominent tale describes the hero Aiai transforming a rock into the first honu by etching marks upon it near the shore, endowing the creature with both terrestrial and aquatic essence to aid humanity.[80][81] The legend of Kauila, a magical turtle born from an egg laid by the sea turtle Honupookea at Punalu'u Black Sand Beach, illustrates honu benevolence. Honupookea and her mate created a freshwater spring for their offspring; Kauila resided there, granting water to islanders in times of drought and transforming into a woman to interact with humans, reinforcing turtles' role as intermediaries between sea and land. This narrative, rooted in oral traditions documented in the 19th century, underscores honu as symbols of fertility and sustenance, with shells historically used for currency and adornments.[82][83] In Fijian traditions of the Lau Islands, communities like those on Kadavu and Koro exhibit drua—a supernatural affinity for calling sea turtles (ngu) to shore for ritual harvest, a practice observed as early as European contact in the 18th century. Elders from Nacamaki village on Koro Island possess this hereditary gift, invoking turtles through chants and songs, viewing them as kin spirits integral to chiefly ceremonies and taboos that regulate consumption to ensure sustainability. Anthropological accounts from the 20th century describe these callers summoning turtles without spears, highlighting turtles' sacred status over mere prey.[84] Palauan lore features the "Turtle and Canoe" tale, where a hunter named Eledui wagers his life against a rival by spearing a massive turtle that tows his canoe to safety, proving human cunning and the turtle's unwitting aid in survival narratives. In broader Micronesian mythology, sea turtles feature in creation and conservation myths, such as Caroline Islands rituals where turtles are taboo during nesting seasons, framed by ancient stories attributing their longevity to divine pacts, as documented in ethnographic studies from the 1980s. These tales, preserved in oral genealogies, emphasize turtles' role in maintaining ecological balance through mythic prohibitions.[85][86] Samoan and Tongan folklore portray turtles as sacred entities, with pools like Satoalepai serving as protected habitats where they are hand-fed, reflecting pre-colonial reverence tied to legends of turtles ferrying gods or heroes across the Pacific. On Rapa Nui (Easter Island), archaeological evidence from moai sites and oral histories indicate turtles as totems in fishing rites, with myths contrasting their abundance in pre-European times against later depletion, informing modern conservation taboos. Across Melanesia, including Papua New Guinea, turtles symbolize clan ancestry, as seen in shell artifacts used in rituals, underscoring their mythic endurance in matrilineal societies.[87][88][89]Religious and Spiritual Roles
In Hinduism and Vedic Texts
In Vedic literature, the tortoise symbolizes foundational stability and cosmic support. The Taittiriya Samhita of the Black Yajurveda references the tortoise as the base upon which the earth rests, providing unyielding firmness in rituals such as the Agnichayana, where it guides participants toward heavenly realms (5.2.8.6).[90] The Shatapatha Brahmana elaborates on this by equating the tortoise with Prajapati's creative essence, its plastron embodying the earth, carapace the sky, and the enclosed space the atmospheric realm (7.5.1.2).[90] The figure of Akupara, a primordial tortoise, appears in Vedic and post-Vedic contexts as the upholder of the world, bearing the earth and seas on its back to prevent submersion.[91] This motif underscores the tortoise's role in sustaining existential balance against primordial chaos. In Puranic Hinduism, the tortoise manifests as Kurma, the second avatar of Vishnu, during the Samudra Manthan—the churning of the Milk Ocean. To aid the weakened devas and asuras in obtaining amrita (nectar of immortality), Vishnu assumes the form of a colossal tortoise to anchor Mount Mandara at the ocean's base, countering its tendency to sink under the churning force exerted by Vasuki the serpent.[90] [92] This intervention stabilizes the process, yielding treasures like Lakshmi and the poison halahala, while symbolizing endurance and the preservation of dharma.[92] Beyond mythology, the tortoise embodies pratyahara (sense withdrawal) in yogic philosophy, mirroring its retraction of limbs into the shell as a metaphor for inner control and detachment, echoed in texts like the Kshurika Upanishad and Bhagavad Gita.[90]In Chinese Religions and Taoism
In Chinese religions, particularly Taoism, turtles symbolize longevity, resilience, and cosmic harmony, embodying the balance between heaven and earth as well as yin and yang principles. Their domed shell represents the heavens, while the flat plastron signifies the earth, reflecting a microcosmic order central to Taoist cosmology. Turtles are attributed with endurance and adaptability, qualities revered in Taoist pursuit of immortality and alignment with the Tao.[93] The Black Tortoise, known as Xuanwu, holds prominent status as one of the Four Symbols in Chinese mythology and Taoism, guarding the north, winter, and the water element. Depicted as a tortoise entwined with a snake, Xuanwu serves as a spiritual protector and deity, with legends recounting a prince who abandoned the throne at age 16 to cultivate Taoist practices, achieving divine form. Temples like those on Wudang Mountain, associated since the Song Dynasty (960–1279 CE), honor Xuanwu, underscoring his role in martial and esoteric Taoist traditions.[93][94] Turtle shells featured in ancient divination practices during the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE), burned for oracle bone and shell inscriptions that influenced the I Ching, linking turtles to prophetic wisdom in early Chinese religious rituals with Taoist underpinnings. In creation myths, turtles appear as cosmic supporters, such as in variants where Nüwa used a turtle's legs to mend the sky during the Zhou (1046–256 BCE) and Tang (618–907 CE) periods. The bixi, a dragon-turtle hybrid mythically tamed by Yu the Great (c. 2123–2025 BCE) for flood control, bears steles in temples and mausoleums from the Han Dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE) onward, symbolizing stability and imperial legitimacy infused with religious reverence.[93][95][36]In Indigenous and Animist Beliefs
In animist belief systems prevalent among many indigenous peoples, turtles are often perceived as animate beings endowed with spirits or souls, integral to the spiritual fabric of the natural world. These traditions attribute to turtles qualities such as endurance, wisdom, and protective power, derived from observable traits like their longevity—some species living over 100 years—and armored shells that shield against threats. Shamans and spiritual practitioners invoke turtle spirits for grounding, healing, and navigating life's challenges, viewing the creature as a mediator between earthly and aquatic realms.[96] Among Amazonian indigenous groups practicing animism, turtle motifs appear in ancient cave art, such as pictographs depicting turtles in subterranean contexts where the animals rarely venture in reality, suggesting symbolic or spiritual significance tied to underworld journeys or ancestral communications. These representations, found in sites like those explored in paleoindian rock art studies, underscore turtles' role in animistic ontologies where non-human entities possess agency and participate in cosmological narratives.[97][98] In West African animist traditions, particularly among the Ga and Akan peoples of Ghana, sea turtles hold sacred status protected by longstanding taboos rooted in origin myths that portray them as embodiments of ancestral spirits or divine messengers. These prohibitions against harming or consuming turtles, documented since at least the 20th century, reflect a causal link between respecting turtle spirits and ensuring ecological balance, with violations believed to invite misfortune or disrupt communal harmony.[99] Pacific Island animist cultures, including Micronesian communities, frequently cast turtles as trickster figures with inherent spiritual potency, embodying enmity or cunning interactions with humans in oral traditions that emphasize moral lessons through the turtle's deliberate actions. This portrayal aligns with broader animist views of animals as moral agents capable of influencing human affairs, where turtle spirits demand respect to avert trickery or calamity.[100] Across these diverse animist frameworks, the turtle's depiction consistently emphasizes its role as a bearer of ancient knowledge, with its slow, deliberate movement symbolizing patience and resilience against temporal flux, as evidenced in ethnographic accounts of rituals where turtle effigies or shells facilitate spirit communion.[101]In Abrahamic and Other Traditions
In the Hebrew Bible, turtles are not prominently featured, but Leviticus 11:29 classifies certain creeping animals, including those translated as tortoises in some versions, among the unclean creatures prohibited for consumption by Israelites. This dietary restriction reflects broader purity laws distinguishing land-dwelling reptiles from permissible foods, with no attributed spiritual symbolism to the turtle itself. References to "turtles" in the King James Version, such as in Song of Solomon 2:12 or Leviticus 12:8, actually denote turtledoves (Torah tor), migratory birds symbolizing fidelity, purity, and seasonal renewal due to their lifelong pairing and spring arrival in the Levant, rather than reptiles.[102] [103] In post-biblical Jewish thought, turtles occasionally symbolize self-sufficiency and portability, as their shell serves as a mobile dwelling, akin to the portable Tabernacle (Mishkan) in rabbinic interpretations emphasizing divine protection and exile resilience.[104] However, such associations remain peripheral, with no central role in Talmudic or Kabbalistic cosmology; turtles are absent from core creation narratives or messianic imagery. Christian symbolism draws interpretive lessons from turtles' traits, portraying them as emblems of patience, perseverance, and humility in medieval bestiaries and moral allegories, where the slow gait evokes steadfast faith amid trials, and the shell represents divine armor or withdrawal for contemplation, paralleling monastic seclusion.[105] Early Church Fathers like St. Jerome viewed the tortoise negatively as a symbol of sin's burden or unchastity, associating its withdrawal into the shell with evasion of worldly temptations or hidden vice.[106] Modern Christian writings extend this to analogies of spiritual growth, likening sea turtle hatchlings' perilous beach crawl to believers navigating predation toward maturity in grace.[107] In Islam, turtles lack explicit depiction in the Quran or authentic Hadith as symbols of virtue or cosmology; dietary rulings predominate, deeming most turtles—particularly land varieties—haram (forbidden) due to their amphibious nature, possession of teeth, or classification among predatory or repulsive creatures, though sea turtles' permissibility varies by madhhab (e.g., prohibited in Hanafi and Shafi'i schools).[108] [109] No prophetic narratives or Sufi metaphors elevate turtles to spiritual icons, contrasting with their roles in non-Abrahamic cosmogonies. Among other traditions adjacent to Abrahamic contexts, such as ancient Zoroastrianism, turtles receive no distinct mention in Avestan texts or Pahlavi literature, where animals are broadly categorized into beneficial (e.g., cattle) or noxious (xrafstar, including reptiles like snakes but not specifying turtles), with ritual purity emphasizing avoidance of impurity-causing creatures without turtle-specific lore.[110] Archaeological evidence from the Near East, including a 37,000-year-old tortoise engraving in Turkey, hints at prehistoric veneration predating Abrahamic faiths, potentially as fertility or earth symbols, but lacks continuity with later monotheistic traditions.[111]Symbolism, Attributes, and Proverbs
Core Symbolic Meanings
Turtles commonly symbolize longevity in diverse cultural traditions, a meaning derived from species such as the Galápagos tortoise, documented to live over 150 years in captivity, reflecting endurance against environmental pressures. This association appears in East Asian folklore, where turtles embody extended life and immortality, as seen in ancient Chinese texts linking them to the Black Warrior constellation for perpetual vitality. In Indigenous North American lore, the turtle's resilience similarly connotes long life and survival, with oral histories emphasizing its role in sustaining creation narratives over generations.[112] The turtle's protective shell serves as a universal emblem of defense and self-sufficiency, enabling retreat into an armored haven during threats, a trait observed in both terrestrial and aquatic species that retract limbs for impenetrable shielding. This symbolism manifests in African Akan proverbs praising the shell as a mobile fortress symbolizing independence and survival amid adversity.[113] Among Navajo (Diné) communities, the shell further represents perseverance, invoked in rituals for safeguarding health and clan continuity against external harms.[114] Wisdom and patience are attributed to turtles due to their methodical locomotion and deliberate behaviors, contrasting hasty actions with sustained progress, as evidenced by studies on their energy-efficient navigation over vast distances. In Celtic interpretations, this slow steadfastness signifies thoughtful endurance and humility, aligning with proverbs equating turtle-like pacing to prudent decision-making in uncertain terrains.[115] Hindu Vedic texts reinforce this through Kurma, the tortoise incarnation of Vishnu, whose patient stability during the ocean-churning myth underscores cosmic order and insightful restraint. Turtles often embody stability and earthly connection, portrayed in cosmogonies as foundational bearers of the world, with the shell mirroring terrestrial plates or continental drift in mythic form.[116] Hindu mythology explicitly depicts the earth supported by a turtle beneath elephants, symbolizing unyielding grounding amid chaos.[117] Native American traditions, particularly Anishinaabe, identify the turtle as Turtle Island—North America itself—personifying Mother Earth’s nurturing fertility and balanced sustenance for life.[118] These motifs highlight causal links between the turtle's anatomical durability and human projections of reliable, life-affirming permanence.Negative or Ambivalent Associations
In various cultural traditions, turtles have been associated with slowness, often interpreted as laziness or inefficiency, contrasting their positive attributes like endurance. For instance, in European allegorical art from the medieval period onward, turtles appear alongside snails as emblems of sloth, one of the seven deadly sins, symbolizing sluggishness and moral torpor.[119] This depiction underscores a causal link between the animal's deliberate pace and human procrastination, where rapid action is prized over plodding persistence. Similarly, idioms such as "slow as a tortoise" in English and equivalent expressions in other Indo-European languages carry pejorative undertones, implying delay or ineptitude in tasks requiring urgency.[120] In Chinese culture, turtles evoke ambivalence, revered for longevity yet invoked in derogatory slang that ties them to personal failings. Terms like "wáng bā" (turtle) denote a cuckold, deriving from observations of male turtles allegedly abandoning mates, symbolizing betrayal or emasculation, while "guī dàn" (turtle egg) insults someone as illegitimate or worthless.[35] [36] These usages reflect a historical duality: turtles as cosmic stabilizers in mythology, but folklorically linked to cowardice, deceit, or death due to their burrowing habits and grave associations, prompting curses despite ritual veneration.[36] Such expressions persist in dialects, where turtle imagery amplifies scorn without undermining the animal's auspicious role in divination or architecture. Ancient Egyptian views cast turtles, particularly Nile species, as embodiments of chaos and nocturnal evil, antithetical to solar order. The deity Apesh, depicted with a turtle head, governed night and was deemed malevolent, while turtles featured as adversaries of Ra, speared in spells to avert their disruptive influence.[16] This negativity stemmed from the turtle's secretive, watery habits evoking primordial disorder, rendering it a target for protective amulets and rituals that neutralized its "evil associate" qualities, as invoked against deities like Sekhmet.[16] Though occasionally harnessed as wards, their core symbolism prioritized destruction over harmony, highlighting a stark opposition to life-affirming forces.[19]In Proverbs, Idioms, and Heraldry
Turtles and tortoises feature prominently in proverbs and idioms across cultures, often embodying attributes of slowness, perseverance, protection, and longevity derived from their biological traits of deliberate movement and durable shells.[35][121] The English idiom "slow as a turtle" or "slow as a tortoise" illustrates sluggish pace, while "off like a herd of turtles" denotes an unpromisingly lethargic beginning to an endeavor.[122] Similarly, "turn turtle," originating from nautical contexts where vessels capsize to expose their bottoms like overturned turtles, signifies a sudden reversal of fortune or literal overturning.[123] In African traditions, proverbs highlight communal aid and inherent limitations; for instance, a Zambian saying notes that a tortoise atop a table implies external assistance, as its anatomy precludes self-elevation, underscoring that apparent achievements may stem from others' help rather than individual merit.[124] A related Senegalese proverb compares trusting wealth to seeking feathers on turtles, emphasizing the folly of pursuing incompatible or illusory gains.[125] Malay folklore employs the turtle's prolific yet unobserved egg-laying to encourage persistent, unheralded efforts, as in the adage that the turtle deposits thousands of eggs unseen by others.[126] Arabic proverbs use the turtle's dependence on water to depict denial of reliance, as in "the turtle quarreled with the lake," where rejecting aid masks underlying vulnerability. The phrase "turtles all the way down," though rooted in a 19th-century anecdote critiquing infinite cosmological regress—wherein a supporter posits the Earth rests on a turtle, which in turn rests on another, ad infinitum—has entered philosophical discourse to denote circular or unfounded explanatory chains. Another motivational idiom, "turtles only advance when they stick their necks out," draws from the animal's anatomy to advocate calculated risk-taking for progress, paralleling principles of incremental advancement.[127] In heraldry, the tortoise (often interchangeable with turtle) serves as a charge symbolizing patience, longevity, and deliberate steadfastness, reflecting its real-world endurance and protective shell.[128][121] Typically blazoned displayed tergiant—lying on its back with limbs extended—it represents invulnerability to hasty assaults and assured, if gradual, advancement, as seen in period arms like those of Esslinger in 16th-century German records.[128][129] This usage aligns with broader emblematic traditions valuing temporal resilience over speed, with historical texts attributing to it qualities of prudence and self-sufficiency.[130]Modern Media and Popular Culture
Literature and Children's Works
Turtles feature prominently in ancient fables, such as Aesop's "The Tortoise and the Hare," where a persistent tortoise outpaces an arrogant hare who pauses to rest, embodying the principle that steady determination overcomes overconfidence.[27] This Greek tale, transmitted orally from around the 6th century BCE and later compiled in written collections, underscores virtues of perseverance in Western literary tradition and has inspired adaptations across cultures, including variants where the tortoise employs cunning rather than mere endurance.[131] In 19th-century American folklore, Joel Chandler Harris's Uncle Remus stories, published starting in 1880, portray Brer Tarrypin (a terrapin) as a shrewd trickster who uses wit to evade predators like Brer Fox, reflecting Southern oral traditions adapted into narrative form.[132] Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) introduces the Mock Turtle, a melancholic sea creature parodying institutional education through puns on "turtle soup" and fabricated school subjects like "Reeling and Writhing," highlighting absurdity in rigid curricula.[133] In children's literature, Dr. Seuss's Yertle the Turtle (1958) depicts a despotic turtle king who stacks his subjects into a tower for dominance, only to collapse under his own ambition, serving as an allegory for unchecked power. The Franklin the Turtle series, initiated by Paulette Bourgeois in 1986 with Franklin in the Dark, follows a young turtle navigating everyday anxieties like fear of the dark, promoting themes of self-reliance and friendship through anthropomorphic adventures illustrated by Brenda Clark. Other notable works include Richard Buckley's The Foolish Tortoise (1985), where a turtle discards its shell seeking speed but returns humbled, reinforcing protective caution.[134] These depictions often leverage turtles' slow, shelled nature to explore morals of patience, resilience, and humility in accessible narratives for young readers.[135]Film, Television, and Animation
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, four anthropomorphic turtles named Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael, and Donatello, emerged as a major franchise from a 1984 comic book parody by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird, expanding into animation with a syndicated television series premiering on December 14, 1987, where the characters battle villains like Shredder while training under their rat sensei Splinter in New York City's sewers.[136][137] The series, running until 1996 with 193 episodes, portrayed the turtles as pizza-loving martial artists embodying brotherhood and resilience, influencing multiple reboots including the 2003-2009 animated show and 2012-2017 series.[136] Live-action films began with the 1990 release directed by Steve Barron, featuring practical effects for the turtle suits, followed by animated features like the 2007 CGI film and 2014-2016 reboots.[136] Earlier animation drew from fables, as in the 1941 Looney Tunes short Tortoise Beats Hare, where Cecil Turtle defeats Bugs Bunny in a race through clever traps, highlighting persistence over speed in a spoof of Aesop's The Tortoise and the Hare.[138] In Japanese kaiju cinema, Gamera debuted as a prehistoric, jet-propelled turtle in the 1965 film Gamera: The Giant Monster, initially destructive but evolving into a child-defending guardian against threats like Godzilla rivals across eight Showa-era films through 1971 and later Heisei trilogies starting in 1995.[139] Children's programming featured Franklin the Turtle in a Canadian animated series from 1997 to 2006, adapted from Paulette Bourgeois and Brenda Clark's books, depicting the young turtle navigating friendships, family, and moral dilemmas like honesty and patience in Woodland Vale.[140] In feature films, Pixar's Finding Nemo (released May 30, 2003) introduced Crush, a 150-year-old green sea turtle voiced with surfer slang, who aids clownfish Marlin and Dory by riding ocean currents, symbolizing relaxed guidance amid marine perils.[141] DreamWorks' Kung Fu Panda (June 6, 2008) cast Master Oogway as an ancient tortoise and kung fu inventor, voiced by Dustin Hoffman, whose wisdom and ascension emphasize inner peace and destiny in training the panda warrior Po.[142]Video Games and Digital Entertainment
Turtles are commonly depicted in video games as resilient, armored creatures, often leveraging their shells for defense or as platforms for gameplay mechanics, reflecting real-world attributes of protection and endurance. In the Super Mario series, Koopa Troopas, introduced in Super Mario Bros. on September 13, 1985, serve as ubiquitous enemies under Bowser's command; these anthropomorphic turtles retract into their removable shells when struck, allowing players to use the shells as projectiles or temporary shields.[143] Their design draws from tortoise-like features, emphasizing vulnerability outside the shell and tactical retraction, with variants like red-shelled Koopas that walk off edges rather than turning around.[143] The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT) franchise features anthropomorphic turtles as protagonists—Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello, and Michelangelo—who wield ninja weapons against foes like Shredder, originating from Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird's 1984 comic but prominently adapted into gaming. The first TMNT video game, a beat 'em up developed by Konami, launched in arcades in 1989 and was ported to the NES, establishing the turtles as agile, team-based fighters despite their reptilian basis, with over 20 titles following across platforms, including Turtles in Time (1991), which introduced time-travel mechanics.[144] These portrayals anthropomorphize turtles as youthful, pizza-loving heroes, diverging from natural sluggishness to highlight combat prowess and brotherhood, influencing subsequent media tie-ins.[145] In the Pokémon series, turtle-inspired creatures underscore elemental themes, such as Squirtle, a water-type starter Pokémon resembling a juvenile sea turtle with a resilient shell for water propulsion, debuting in Pokémon Red and Green on February 27, 1996, in Japan. It evolves into Wartortle and Blastoise, the latter featuring shoulder-mounted cannons for high-pressure water attacks, symbolizing amplified defensive and offensive capabilities.[146] Additional examples include Turtwig from Pokémon Diamond and Pearl (2006), a grass-type tortoise evoking earth-bound stability, and Torkoal, a fire-type with a volcanic shell, portraying turtles as adaptable to diverse biomes and roles in battles.[147] Beyond these, turtles appear in supporting roles emphasizing wisdom or utility, such as Tortimer, the elderly tortoise mayor in Animal Crossing (2001), who oversees events and embodies steadfast community leadership, or Koops in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004), a timid ally using his shell for environmental puzzles. Giant turtles like Adamantoise in Final Fantasy XV (2016) function as formidable bosses, their massive shells providing natural armor in open-world combat.[148] These depictions consistently exploit turtle physiology for interactive elements, prioritizing durability over speed, though anthropomorphic variants often subvert slowness for narrative or playable dynamism.[149]Sports, Advertising, and Contemporary Art
In American college sports, the diamondback terrapin serves as the mascot for the University of Maryland's athletic teams, known as the Terrapins or "Terps," with the live mascot named Testudo representing resilience and regional identity tied to the Chesapeake Bay habitat of this turtle species.[150] The choice, formalized in the early 20th century after an editorial suggestion in The Diamondback student newspaper, contrasts the turtle's deliberate pace with the tenacity required in competitive athletics, enduring as a symbol despite initial perceptions of it as an unconventional mascot compared to faster animals.[151] In professional baseball, the Daytona Tortugas of the Florida State League feature Shelldon, an anthropomorphic turtle mascot introduced in 2015, who engages fans through games and promotions, embodying the team's name derived from Spanish for "turtles" and referencing local coastal ecology. Similarly, the Pulaski River Turtles in the Appalachian League adopted their turtle-themed identity in 2015, with mascot appearances emphasizing community ties in Virginia's New River Valley.[152] Turtles have appeared in advertising to evoke themes of longevity, environmental protection, and ironic contrasts between slowness and efficiency. In a 2015 campaign by Save Energy Windows & Doors, a turtle motif highlighted rapid service delivery despite the animal's stereotyped pace, correlating with a 28% revenue increase for the residential window provider in under two years.[153] SodaStream's 2018 television advertisement featured an animated sea turtle voiced by Rod Stewart, critiquing plastic pollution's impact on marine life to promote the brand's reusable bottles, with the turtle's journey underscoring sustainability amid ocean debris.[154] Conservation-focused ads, such as Greenpeace's 2020 "Turtle Journey" animated short by Aardman Studios, depict a turtle family's perilous migration through climate-altered oceans to advocate for reduced emissions, distributed across digital platforms to raise awareness of habitat threats.[155] In Mexico, a 2006 public service campaign by the National Commission of Protected Natural Areas used provocative imagery of model Dorismar to discourage consumption of endangered sea turtle eggs, linking human dietary habits directly to species decline with slogans like "My man doesn't need turtle eggs."[156] Contemporary artists incorporate turtles to explore ecological fragility, endurance, and human-animal intersections, often critiquing environmental degradation. Eduardo Navarro's installations, such as a 2023 New Museum exhibit featuring a sculptural Galápagos tortoise model paired with leather masks, invite participatory experiences that probe evolutionary adaptation and extinction risks in the Anthropocene.[157] Gallen Benson's 1996 bronze sculpture Green Sea Turtle at the Smithsonian American Art Museum captures the reptile's streamlined form in a naturalistic pose, emphasizing biomechanical precision amid ocean conservation concerns, with dimensions of 11.5 x 1.25 x 0.375 inches reflecting meticulous casting techniques.[158] In painting, Jay Alders' 2020s oil work Hatchling portrays a sea turtle family on a Hawaiian beach at sunset, using warm tones to symbolize nascent vulnerability against coastal development pressures, though such representational styles prioritize accessibility over abstraction in broader contemporary discourse.[159] These depictions align with a trend where turtles symbolize delayed but inevitable planetary feedback, grounded in observable biodiversity data rather than anthropomorphic sentiment.Depictions in Conservation and Human Utilization
Environmental Narratives and Advocacy
Sea turtles serve as flagship species in environmental advocacy, symbolizing the fragility and interconnectedness of marine ecosystems due to their long migrations, vulnerability to human impacts like plastic pollution and bycatch, and role as keystone predators that maintain seagrass beds and coral reefs.[160][161] Advocacy groups leverage these traits in narratives portraying turtles as sentinels of ocean health, where population declines signal broader biodiversity loss from overfishing and coastal development.[162] Public awareness campaigns frequently employ visual depictions of turtles in distress or triumphant nesting to evoke urgency and reciprocity, encouraging behaviors like reduced plastic use and support for protected areas; for instance, persuasion strategies emphasize peer pressure and commitment through community pledges.[162] In coastal regions, murals featuring sea turtles have demonstrated measurable shifts in local attitudes toward conservation, with surveys in nine Baja California Sur communities showing increased recognition of protection needs post-exposure.[163] Such artistic interventions, often community-led, frame turtles as communal guardians rather than abstract icons, fostering sustained advocacy.[164] Documented conservation successes underscore the efficacy of these narratives, with global monitoring revealing rebounds in most sea turtle populations—such as doubled nesting in some index beaches—attributable to targeted interventions like nest relocation and fishery regulations enforced since the 1980s.[165][166] The International Union for Conservation of Nature's 2025 reassessment downgraded green sea turtles from endangered to least concern, citing reduced exploitation and habitat safeguards, though critics note persistent regional threats like climate-driven nest failures.[167] Community art initiatives, including Galveston's "Turtles About Town" project with 61 decorated statues since 2015, integrate advocacy by linking cultural displays to fundraising for rehabilitation centers.[168] In Indigenous contexts, turtles embody narratives of ecological reciprocity, depicted as carriers of the earth in Anishinaabe lore, informing advocacy for holistic land-water stewardship amid climate stressors like warming waters that disrupt hatching sex ratios.[118] Films such as Turtle Odyssey (2023) amplify these stories through cinematic portrayals of individual turtle journeys, spurring viewer engagement in global petitions and habitat programs by humanizing conservation imperatives.[169] Despite advocacy gains, empirical data reveal uneven progress, with some populations still declining due to illegal trade, prompting calls for evidence-based policies over emotive symbolism alone.[170]Traditional Practical Uses and Economic Roles
Turtle shells have been employed in traditional crafting for ornaments, tools, and containers in numerous ancient societies. In pre-dynastic Egypt, bangles fashioned from hawksbill sea turtle scutes appeared in grave sites dating to approximately 5000–3000 BCE.[171] Tortoiseshell artifacts, including bowls and personal items, trace back thousands of years in Egyptian material culture.[172] In ancient China, prior to the Qin dynasty around 221 BCE, turtle shells functioned as a form of currency in trade.[173] Turtle meat and eggs provided sustenance in indigenous and maritime communities worldwide. Freshwater species such as snapping turtles, terrapins, and soft-shelled turtles were harvested for food by Native American groups.[174] Green sea turtles supplied protein for sailors during the Age of Sail, with historical records documenting their capture and preservation using natural salt deposits on islands like those in the Caribbean as early as the 16th century.[175][176] Medicinal applications of turtle parts featured prominently in traditional healing practices. Among the Saharia tribe of India, turtle components treated conditions including cough, asthma, and tuberculosis, as documented in ethnomedical surveys from 2007.[177] The Wayúu indigenous people of Venezuela's Guajira peninsula utilized marine turtles for remedies addressing various health issues, underscoring their role in pre-colonial pharmacopeia. Economically, turtles supported trade networks through shell harvesting and live animal exchange. International commerce in sea turtle products, particularly hawksbill shells for tortoiseshell, extended back centuries, with European exploitation of Caribbean populations commencing in the 1500s.[178] In Papua New Guinea, communities have historically relied on marine turtles for both subsistence and ceremonial exchange, maintaining their value into traditional economies as of studies in 2023.[179] Turtle shell rattles, crafted from whole shells, served as percussion instruments in ceremonial contexts among Indigenous peoples of the Americas, linking practical utility to cultural rituals.[180]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Amazonian_Tortoise_Myths
- https://wikizilla.org/wiki/Gamera_%28franchise%29