The species names
atropos,
lachesis and
styx are all from Greek myth and related to death. The first refers to the member of the three
Moirai who cuts the threads of life of all beings; the second to the Moira who allots the correct amount of life to a being; and the last refers to the river of the dead. In addition the genus name
Acherontia is derived from
Acheron, a river of Greek myth that was said to be a branch of the river Styx. According to John Jarvis Bisset in his 1875 work
Sport and War in South Africa, "The death's-head moth, as found in South Africa, is about the size and length of a man's finger, and it has a most perfect death's-head-and-marrowbones painted by Nature with all her beauty on its back. The legend both amongst the Dutch and the natives of the Cape of Good Hope, is, that this moth has a sting, and that a puncture from it causes instant death. This moth is generally found in beehives, particularly when they are in the ground or in decayed trees." The skull-like pattern and its fanciful associations with the supernatural and evil have fostered superstitious fears of
Acherontia species, particularly
Acherontia atropos, perhaps because it is the most widely known. The moths' sharp, mouse-like squeaking intensify the effect. Nor is this a new attitude: during the mid-19th century, entomologist
Edward Newman, having earlier mentioned the mark on the
thorax wrote: "However, let the cause of the noise be what it may, the effect is to produce the most superstitious feelings among the uneducated, by whom it is always regarded with feelings of awe and terror." According to legend, the species (
atropos) was first seen in Britain at the time of the
execution of
King Charles I, but it is more likely to have simply become more common by that time, having arrived with the first transportation of potatoes some decades earlier. Though rarer, it is still occasionally sighted in the country.
Edgar Allan Poe's short story
The Sphinx describes a close encounter with a death's-head sphinx moth, describing it as "the genus Sphinx, of the family Crepuscularia of the order Lepidoptera." These moths have often been featured in art, such as by German artist
Sulamith Wülfing and English artist
William Holman Hunt in his 1851 painting
The Hireling Shepherd. Films such as
Un Chien Andalou (1929, by
Luis Buñuel and
Salvador Dalí) and the 1991 film
The Silence of the Lambs (and in Chapter 33 of the
source novel, whereas in Chapter 14 a different moth species is used, the
black witch moth) feature the moth. The death's-head moth also featured in the 1968 horror film
The Blood Beast Terror starring
Peter Cushing. The species
Acherontia atropos is mentioned, though the costume of the human-moth hybrid creature is not an accurate representation of the moth. The moth plays a central role in the 2015 Taiwanese horror film
The Tag-Along. In 2018
survival horror game,
Remothered: Tormented Fathers by Italian artist Chris Darril, they represent both the transformation and the human psyche. They also work as a parasite which interfere with people's memories, old repressed events, and feelings of guilt. ==Gallery==