The Authentic Orthography
Rebirth, Immortality · Purple-red, Phoenician

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison
Φοῖνιξ
The name in its original Greek form. Phoînix (Φοῖνιξ) is attested in the source tradition — “Purple-red, Phoenician”. Its diphthongs and acute accents carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.
phoenix
Reduced to plain phoenix, the name loses everything that made it specific: diphthongs and acute accents. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.
Phoînix
The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Phoînix restores diphthongs and acute accents, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.
Phoînix.com → xn--phonix-dwa.com
The non-ASCII characters in Phoînix are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Phoînix.
How Phoînix is preserved in writing
A bespoke provenance study for Phoînix is being prepared by the PUNICODEX scholarly team.
Contribute scholarly provenance →How Phoînix was spoken
Immortality, Solar Rebirth, Purple Flame
Phoînix is the Arabian bird that dies in fire and rises renewed from its own ashes. A symbol of solar rebirth and indomitable life, it appears in Greek, Roman, Egyptian, and later Christian and Islamic lore as the creature that overcomes death by transformation.
It lives in the east and greets the sun; its death and rebirth mirror the solar cycle.
At death it builds a nest of spices and burns; the new phoenix rises from the ashes.
Its plumage is the color of Phoenician dye, crimson, and the setting sun.
Its lifespan is measured in centuries or millennia; each death begins a new age.
Stories of Phoînix
The phoenix is not a Greek native; it entered Greek literature from Egyptian and Near Eastern sources. But Greek and Roman writers gave it its most enduring form: the solitary bird that is its own parent and child.
Herodotus (Histories 2.73) recounts what Egyptian priests told him: a sacred bird called the phoenix comes to Heliopolis once every 500 years, bearing the body of its father embalmed in an egg of myrrh. The story already contains the germ of self-renewal through death.
By the time of Tacitus, Pliny, and the Physiologus, the phoenix builds a pyre of spices, turns to face the sun, and is consumed. From the ashes a small worm forms, grows wings, and becomes the new phoenix. The cycle is now complete self-generation.
Early Christians adopted the phoenix as an image of Christ's resurrection and the general resurrection of the dead. Clement of Rome and Tertullian both cite the bird as natural proof that God can raise the body. The pagan symbol became a central Christian emblem.
Phoînix is the myth of second chances made literal. Unlike heroes who achieve one death and one glory, the phoenix dies and returns, again and again. It is therefore not a story of escape from mortality but of mortality transformed into continuity.
Enter Extended Lore