Turtle Dove in Easton's Bible Dictionary
Its peculiar peaceful and gentle habit its often referred to
in
Scripture. A pair was offered in sacrifice by Mary
at her
purification (Luke 2:24). The pigeon and the turtle-
dove were
the only birds permitted to be offered in sacrifice
(Lev. 1:14;
5:7; 14:22; 15:14, 29, etc.). The Latin name of this
bird,
_turtur_, is derived from its note, and is a
repetition of the
Hebrew name _tor_. Three species are found in
Israel, (1) the
turtle-dove (Turtur auritus), (2) the collared
turtle (T.
risorius), and (3) the palm turtle (T.
Senegalensis). But it is
to the first of these species which the various
passages of
Scripture refer. It is a migratory bird (Jer. 8:7;
Cant. 2:11,
12). "Search the glades and valleys, even by sultry
Jordan, at
the end of March, and not a turtle-dove is to be
seen. Return in
the second week of April, and clouds of doves are
feeding on the
clovers of the plain. They overspread the whole face
of the
land." "Immediately on its arrival it pours forth
from every
garden, grove, and wooded hill its melancholy yet
soothing ditty
unceasingly from early dawn till sunset. It is from
its
plaintive and continuous note, doubtless, that
David, pouring
forth his heart's sorrow to God, compares himself to
a
turtle-dove" (Ps. 74:19).
Read More about Turtle Dove in Easton's Bible Dictionary