Shop by Price. Shop by Type. Unplated Sterling Chains. Rhodium-Plated Sterling Chains. Symbolism Guide. Home What do hares symbolize? The hare is associated with a number of myths from many different cultures.
The Algonquin tribe honored the Great Hare as a demiurge, a role in the creation of the world. The Egyptians also saw the hare involved in a creation story. For them, the hare came to mean procreation, and then immorality. This reflects the attitudes of medieval hunters, who viewed hares as a challenge to catch.
Hare people are considered sensitive and artistic, and also linked with ambition, fitness, and virtue. However, the hare is not just associated with positive things.
In hare mythology, the hare is a creature with pagan, sacred and mystic associations, by turns benign, cunning, romantic or, most famously, in its March courtship rituals, mad. It is largely silent, preferring to feed at night or, in summer, as the last light fades from the day, a shadowy existence which adds to its mysteriousness in hare mythology.
In hare mythology and folklore, hares are invested with a similar remoteness. Such superstition surrounding hare mythology appears not to have been confined to India.
It concerned the trial for witchcraft in of an old woman called Julian Cox. And the huntsman and his dogs went home presently sadly affrighted. The Romans are credited with introducing brown hares to Britain more than 2, years ago.
If we are to believe the story of the Iceni queen Boudica consulting the entrails of a hare as an augury of victory in her uprising against the Romans in AD61, the animals had established themselves quickly. Their preference then as now was for open country and grassland, downs and flat marshlands.
In succeeding centuries, farmland, particularly arable land, also proved popular with hares. More recently, despite the greater speed of the sighthounds used for coursing, hares frequently outwitted their pursuers by their ability to turn and corner with unrivalled agility.
A survey in estimated current brown hare numbers in Britain in the region of ,, a figure which represents a consistent if gradual decline since the Sixties. Unlike rabbits, hares are resistant to myxomatosis and have suffered no equivalent cull. If few town-based people are fortunate enough to see a hare in the wild, there can be no Britons unfamiliar with its appearance.
Today hare mythology has extended and the hare motif is to be found on fabric, wallpaper, cushions, lampshades and ties; it has been used as a letterhead, a heraldic device and in the design of stock pins, cuff-links, brooches and charms for bracelets.
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