The word 'swan' descends from Old English 'swan,' from Proto-Germanic *swanaz (swan), from PIE *swon- or *swen- (to sound, to sing, to make a tone). The swan is 'the singer' — named not for its visual beauty but for its voice. This etymology connects the swan to the PIE root that also produced Latin 'sonus' (sound, source of 'sonic,' 'sonnet,' 'sonata,' 'resonance,' 'consonant,' 'dissonant'), and possibly Sanskrit 'svan-' (to sound, to resound). The swan and the sonnet are, at the deepest level, both about making sound.
The Germanic cognates are highly consistent: German 'Schwan,' Dutch 'zwaan,' Swedish 'svan,' Danish 'svane,' Norwegian 'svane,' and Old Norse 'svanr.' The word has been remarkably stable across the Germanic family, both in form and meaning. Old English 'swan' is virtually identical to the modern word — one of the few English words that has been phonologically unchanged for over a thousand years.
The cultural concept most deeply associated with the swan is the 'swan song' — the belief that a swan, silent throughout its life, sings one sublime melody at the moment of death. This belief was widespread in the ancient world. Plato's Phaedo has Socrates invoke it: swans, being sacred to Apollo (god of music), sing at death not from grief but from joy, foreseeing the beauty of the afterlife. Aristotle recorded the belief in his Historia Animalium, noting that swans 'have been observed to sing at the time of their death.' Aeschylus and other Greek
The phrase 'swan song' (German 'Schwanengesang,' French 'chant du cygne') entered English as a metaphor for a final, finest artistic work or performance. Schubert's last collection of songs was posthumously titled 'Schwanengesang.' The metaphor is so embedded in Western culture that it requires no explanation — everyone understands that a 'swan song' means a farewell masterpiece.
In English law, all unmarked mute swans on open waters in England and Wales are the property of the Crown — a tradition dating to the 12th century, when swans were a prized delicacy at royal banquets. The annual 'Swan Upping' ceremony on the Thames, in which officials count and mark cygnets, has been conducted every July since at least 1186. This makes swan ownership one of the oldest continuously observed royal prerogatives in the world.
The name 'Swansea' (Welsh 'Abertawe') may appear to contain 'swan' but actually derives from Old Norse 'Sveinsey' (Sveinn's island) — a Viking place name. However, the folk-etymological association with swans has given the city its unofficial identity. The constellation Cygnus (Latin 'cygnus,' from Greek 'kýknos,' swan) immortalizes the swan in the night sky, associated with the myth of Zeus disguising himself as a swan.