Religion, mythology and philosophy
The 
Asian elephant appears in various 
religious traditions and mythologies. They are treated positively and are sometimes revered as deities, often symbolising strength and wisdom. Similarly, the 
African elephant is seen as the wise chief who impartially settles disputes among the forest creatures in African fables,
[2] and the 
Ashanti tradition holds that they are human chiefs from the past.
[3]
The earth is supported and guarded by mythical 
World Elephants at the compass points of the 
cardinal directions, according to the 
Hindu cosmology of 
ancient India. The classical 
Sanskrit literature also attributes earthquakes to the shaking of their bodies when they tire. Wisdom is represented by the elephant in the form of the deity 
Ganesh, one of the most popular gods in the 
Hindu religion's 
pantheon. Sometimes known as Ganesha, this deity is very distinctive in having a human form with the head of an elephant. This was put on after the human head was either was cut off or burned, depending on the version of the story from various Hindu sources. Lord Ganesha's birthday (rebirth) is celebrated as the Hindu festival known as 
Ganesha Chaturthi.
[4] In 
Japanese Buddhism, their adaptation of Ganesha is known as 
Kangiten("Deva of Bliss"), often represented as an elephant-headed male and female pair shown in a standing embrace to represent 
unity of opposites.
[5]
In 
Hindu iconography, many 
devas are associated with a mount or vehicle known as a 
vāhana. In addition to providing a means of transport, they symbolically represent a divine attribute. The elephant 
vāhana represents wisdom, divine knowledge and royal power; it is associated with 
Lakshmi, 
Brihaspati, 
Shachi and 
Indra. 
Indra was said to ride on a flying 
white elephant named 
Airavata, who was made the King of all elephants by Lord Indra. A white elephant is rare and given special significance. It is often considered sacred and symbolises royalty in Thailand and Burma, where it is also considered a symbol of good luck. In 
Buddhist iconography, the elephant is associated with 
Queen Māyā of Sakya, the mother of 
Gautama Buddha. She had a vivid dream foretelling her pregnancy in which a white elephant featured prominently.
[6] To the royal sages, the white elephant signifies royal majesty and authority; they interpreted the dream as meaning that her child was destined for greatness as a universal monarch or a 
buddha.
[7]
In the version of the 
Chinese zodiac used in 
Northern Thailand, the last year in the 12-year cycle – called "Year of the 
Pig" in China – is known instead as "Year of the Elephant", reflecting the importance of elephants in Thai culture.
In Islamic tradition, the year 570 is when the Prophet 
Muhammad was born and is known as the 
Year of the Elephant.
[9] In that year, 
Abraha, ruler of 
Yemen tried to conquer 
Mecca and demolish the 
Kaaba, reportedly in retaliation for the previous Meccan defilement of a cathedral Abraha had constructed in 
Sana'a.
[10] However, his plan was foiled when his white elephant named Mahmud refused to cross the boundary of Mecca. The elephant, who led Abraha's forty thousand men, could not be persuaded with reason or even with violence, which was regarded as a crucial omen by Abraha's soldiers. This is generally related in the five 
verses of the 
chapter titled '
The Elephant'
[b] in the
Quran.
[11]
The unfamiliarity with the exotic beast has also made elephants a subject of widely different interpretations thus giving rise to mythological creatures. The story of the 
blind men and an elephant was written to show how reality may be viewed from differing perspectives. The source of this 
parable is unknown, but it appears to have originated in India. It has been attributed to 
Buddhists, 
Hindus, 
Jainists, and 
Sufis, and was also used by
Discordians. The scattered skulls of prehistoric 
pygmy elephants on the islands of 
Crete and 
Sicily may have formed the basis of belief in existence of 
cyclopes,
[c] the one-eyed
giants featured in 
Homer's 
Odyssey (c. 800~600 BC). As early as the 1370s, scholars had noted that the skulls feature a large 
nasal cavity at the front that could be mistaken for a singular eye socket;
[13] and the skulls, twice the size of a human's, looked as if they could belong to giant humanoids.
[13][14] It is also suggested that the 
Behemoth described in the 
Book of Job may be the elephant due to its grazing habits and preference to rivers.
[15]
In Art
PrehistoricFrom Stone age 
rock-art to Modern age 
street-art, the elephant has remained a popular subject for artists.
 
Modern
Politics and secular society
The elephant is also depicted by various political groups and in secular society.
In Asia
Asian cultures admire the high intelligence and good memory of Asian elephants. As such, they symbolise wisdom
[25] and royal power. They are used as a representative of various political parties such as 
United National Party of 
Sri Lanka and 
Bahujan Samaj Party of 
India. The 
Elephants of Kerala are an integral part of the daily life in 
Kerala, 
South India.
[26] These 
Indian elephants are loved, revered, groomed and given a prestigious place in the state's culture.
[27] There they are often referred to as the 'sons of the 
sahya.' The elephant is the state animal of Kerala and is featured on the emblem of the 
Government of Kerala. The elephant is also on the flag of the 
Kingdom of Laos with three elephants visible, supporting an umbrella (another symbol of royal power) until it became a republic in 1975. Other Southeast Asian realms have also displayed one or more white elephants.
The elephant can also be found in games. In 
shatranj, the Medieval game from which 
Chess developed, the piece corresponding to the modern 
bishop was known as 
Pil or Alfil("Elephant"; from Persian and Arabic,
[f] respectively).
[28] In the Indian 
chaturanga game the piece is also called "Elephant" (
Gaja). The same is true in 
Chinese chess[g] which has an elephant piece ("Xiàng", 象); the elephant serves as a defensive piece, being the only one that may not cross the river dividing the game board. In the Japanese 
shogi version, the piece was known as the "
Drunken Elephant"; however, it was dropped by order of the 
Emperor Go-Nara and no longer appears in the version played in contemporary Japan. Even with modern Chess, the word for the 
bishop is still 
Alfil in Spanish, 
Alfiere in Italian, 
Feel in Persian, and "Elephant" (Слон) in Russian. All of these games originally simulated a kind of battlefield, thus this piece represented a 
war elephant. In the present-day canonical 
Staunton chess set, the piece's deep groove, which originally represented the elephant's tusks, is now regarded as representing a bishop's (or abbot's) 
mitre.
The elephant also lends its name to some landmarks in Asia. 
Elephanta Island (also called "Gharapuri Island") in 
Mumbai Harbour was given this name by 17th century
Portuguese explorers who saw a monolithic basalt sculpture of an elephant near the entrance to what became known as the 
Elephanta Caves. The Portuguese attempted to take it home with them but ended up dropping it into the sea because their chains were not strong enough. Later, the British moved this elephant to the Victoria and Albert Museum (now 
Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum) in 
Mumbai.
[30]
In Europe
 
Collar of the Danish Order of the Elephant.
 
 
 
 
One of the elephants shot for its
meat at Paris in December 1870.
 
 
 
The killing and eating of the elephants 
Castor and Pollux from the 
Botanical gardens during the 1870 
Siege of Paris received considerable attention at the time. This became emblematic of the hardships and degradation caused by siege and war, especially since the two elephants were previously very popular with the Parisian public. The city of 
Catania, Sicily has an immemorial connection with the elephant. The local sorcerer 
Heliodorus, was credited with either riding a magic elephant or transforming himself into this animal. Under Medieval Arab rule Catania was known as 
Medinat-Al-Fil or 
Balad-Al-Fil (City/State of the Elephant). The symbol of the city is the 
Fontana dell'Elefante (Fountain of the Elephant) assembled in its present form in 1736 by 
Giovanni Battista Vaccarini.
In America
The elephant as the symbol for the 
Republican Party of the United States originated in an 1874 political cartoon of an Asian elephant by
Thomas Nast in 
Harper's Weekly. This cartoon, titled "Third Term Panic", is a parody of 
Aesop's fable,
[i] "
The Ass in the Lion's Skin". It depicts an elephant (labelled 
The Republican Vote) running toward a 
chasm of chaos; frightening a 
jackass[j] in a lion's skin (labelled
Caesarism) which scatters animals representing various interests. Although Nast used the elephant seven more times to represent the "Republican Vote", he did not use it to represent the 
Republican Party until March 1884 in "The Sacred Elephant".
[39]
In Africa
Many African cultures revere the African Elephant as a symbol of strength and power.
[40][41] It is also praised for its size, longevity, stamina, mental faculties, cooperative spirit, and loyalty.
[42] South Africa, uses elephant tusks in their 
coat of arms to represent wisdom, strength, moderation and eternity.
[43] The elephant is symbolically important to the nation of 
Ivory Coast (
Côte d'Ivoire); the 
Coat of arms of Ivory Coast features an elephant head 
escutcheon as its focal point.
Popular culture
The elephant has entered into popular culture through various 
idiomatic expressions and 
adages.
The phrase "Elephants never forget" refers to the belief that elephants have excellent memories. The variation "Women and elephants never forget an injury" originates from the 1904 book 
Reginald on Besetting Sins by British writer Hector Hugh Munro, better known as 
Saki.
[44][45]- 
- Remarkable recall power, researchers believe, is a big part of how elephants survive. Matriarch elephants, in particular, hold a store of social knowledge that their families can scarcely do without, according to research conducted on elephants at Amboseli National Park in Kenya.[46]
 
Literature
Elephants can also represent the hugeness and wildness of the imagination, as in 
Ursula Dubosarsky's 2012 children's book, 
Too Many Elephants in This House,
[56] which also plays with the notion of the 
elephant in the room.
[57] An imaginary elephant can (perhaps) become real, as with the elusive 
Heffalump. Although never specified as an elephant in 
A. A. Milne's 
Winnie the Pooh stories, a heffalump physically resembles an elephant; and 
E. H. Shepard's illustration shows an Indian elephant. "
Heffalump" has since been defined as "a child's term for an elephant."
[58]
Sports
The Elephant is used as a mascot or logo for various sports groups.
Circus showman 
P. T. Barnum donated the stuffed hide of 
Jumbo the elephant to 
Tufts University's in 1885, where Jumbo soon became the mascot for their sports teams. However, all that remains of Jumbo are some ashes stored in a peanut butter jar and a piece of his tail following a fire in 1975. "Jumbo's spirit lives on" in the peanut butter jar which is ceremoniously passed on to successive Athletic Directors.
[59]
The mascot for the 
Oakland Athletics (A's) baseball team is based on the figurative white elephant. The story of picking the mascot began when 
New York Giants' manager 
John McGraw told reporters that Philadelphia manufacturer 
Benjamin Shibe, who owned the controlling interest in the new team, had a "white elephant on his hands"; manager 
Connie Mack defiantly adopted the white elephant as the team mascot.
[m] The A's are sometimes, but infrequently, referred to as the 'Elephants' or 'White Elephants'. Their mascot is nicknamed 
Stomper.
University of Alabama's 
Crimson Tide mascot has been an elephant since 1930 after a sportswriter wrote of a fan yelling "Hold your horses, the elephants are coming!" as the football team rumbled onto the field.
[60] Their elephant-costumed "
Big Al" officially debuted at the 
1979 Sugar Bowl.
 
Music
Film and television
Architecture
In the 18th-century, French architect 
Charles Ribart planned to build a three-level elephant building at the 
Paris site where the 
Arc de Triomphe was eventually built. Nothing became of this, but in the early 19th-century, 
Napoleon conceived of an even larger elephant structure, the 
Elephant of the Bastille. Although the ambitious project was never completed with its intended bronze elephant, a full-sized plaster and wood-frame model stood in its place. After Napoleon's defeat, this structure eventually became a neglected eyesore, and a setting in 
Victor Hugo's 1862 novel, 
Les Misérables.
Three multi-story elephant shaped buildings were built in America by 
James V. Lafferty in the 1880s. The largest, seven-story, thirty-one room 
Elephantine Colossus served as a hotel, concert hall, and attraction on 
Coney Island before it burned down in 1896. The six-story 
Lucy the Elephant is the only remaining of the three, and survives as a tourist attraction near 
Atlantic City. These giant elephant structures, however, are dwarfed by the 32-story 
Bangkok Elephant Tower in Thailand. This iconic elephant-inspired building reflects the influence of the elephant in Thai culture.
[66]
Gallery
 
Elephant catching a flying tengu 
 
 
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A royal white elephant in 19th century Thai art  |  | 
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Fontana dell'Elefante(Fountain of the Elephant); Catania 's symbol  |  | 
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Elephant & Castle statue, London  |  
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Dernier projet pour la fontaine de l'Éléphant de la Bastille (1809–1810), Watercolor by Jean-Antoine Alavoine |  |