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・ Oksedalshøi
・ Oksefjorden
・ Oksefjorden (Aust-Agder)
・ Oksefjorden (Finnmark)
・ Oksem, Dongsolbatsem, Sesolbatsem and Namsolbatsem Islands Important Bird Area
・ Oksen
・ Oksen Mirzoyan
・ Oksenøen
・ Oksenøya
・ Oksfjorden
・ Okshtun
・ Oksibil, Pegunungan Bintang
・ Oksigen FM
・ Oksiutycze
・ Okskaya Nunatak
Oksoko
・ Oksovsky
・ Oksskolten
・ Okstindan
・ Okstindbreen
・ Oksu Station
・ Oksu-dong
・ Oksunbong
・ Oksusucha
・ Oksval
・ Oksvoll
・ Oksywie
・ Oksywie culture
・ Oksza
・ Oksza coat of arms


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Oksoko : ウィキペディア英語版
Oksoko

Oksoko (Turkish: ''Öksökö''), also known as Zuzulo (Turkish: ''Züzülö''), is a double-headed eagle in Turkish mythology.
The Oksoko bird brings down lightning from the Heavens to Earth with rain which in return creates human bodies and humans themselves. This lightning carries Oz (Turkish: ''Öz''). Oz is the human soul. This energy carrying the will of Tengri with a purpose and desire. In fact Oksoko consists of two birds, Toghrul and Kongrul (Tuğrul and Konrul), and sometimes Semruk and Merkut, and it is their combined form.〔Türk Söylence Sözlüğü (Turkish Mythological Dictionary), Deniz Karakurt, (OTRS: CC BY-SA 3.0)〕 Oksoko symbolizes luck and happiness similar to the Huma bird.〔Türk Mitolojisi Ansiklopedik Sözlük, Celal Beydili, Yurt Yayınevi〕
In Turkey, the symbol is being used in various areas like the police, schools, football clubs and municipalities.
==Origins==
The two-headed eagle as the Oksoko can be found in the archaeological remains of the Sumerian civilization. Cylindric seals discovered in Boghazkoy, an old Hittite capital in modern-day Turkey. It originally dates from 3800 BC, and was the Sumerian symbol for the god of Lagash.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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