Online Encyclopedia

PARTRIDGE (Du. Patrijs, Fr. perdrix, ...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 877 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

PARTRIDGE (Du. Patrijs, Fr. perdrix, from
See also:
Lat. perdix, apparently onomatopoeic from the call of the
See also:
bird)
  , a
See also:
game-
See also:
bird, whose
See also:
English name properly denotes the only
See also:
species indigenous to Britain, often nowadays called the grey partridge, the Perdix cinerea of ornithologists . The excellence of its flesh at table has been esteemed from the time of Martial . For the sport of partridge-
See also:
shooting see SHOOTING . The grey partridge has doubtless largely increased in numbers in
See also:
Great Britain since the beginning of the 19th century, when so much down, heath, and moorland was first brought under the plough, for its partiality to an arable country is very evident . It has been observed that the birds which live on grass lands or heather only are
See also:
apt to be smaller and darker in colour than the
See also:
average; but in truth the species when adult is subject to a much greater variation in plumage than is commonly supposed, and the well-known chestnut horse-shoe mark, generally considered distinctive of the cock, is very often absent . In
See also:
Asia the grey partridge seems to be unknown, but in the temperate parts of Eastern
See also:
Siberia its place is taken by a very nearly allied form, P. barbata, and in Tibet there is a bird, P. hodgsoniae, which can hardly with justice be generically separated from it . The
See also:
common red-legged partridge of
See also:
Europe, generally called the French partridge, Caccabis rufa, seems to be justifiably considered the type of a
See also:
separate
See also:
group . This bird was introduced into England in the last quarter of the 18th century, and has established itself in various parts of the country, notwithstanding a widely-spread, and in some respects unreasonable, prejudice against it . It has certainly the habit of trusting nearly as much to its legs as to its wings, and thus incurred the obloquy of old-fashioned sportsmen, whose
See also:
dogs it vexatiously kept at a
See also:
running point; but, when it was also accused of driving away the grey partridge, the charge only showed the ignorance of those who brought it, for as a
See also:
matter of fact the French partridge rather prefers ground which the common species avoids—such as the heaviest clay-soils or the most infertile heaths . The French partridge has several congeners, all with red legs and plumage of similar character . In Africa north of the
See also:
Atlas there is the
See also:
Barbary partridge, C. petrosa; in
See also:
southern Europe another, C. saxatilis, which extends eastward till it is replaced by C. chukar, which reaches India, where it is a well-known bird . Two very interesting
See also:
desert-forms, supposed to be allied to Caccabis, are the Ammoperdix heyi of North Africa and
See also:
Palestine and the A. bonhami of
See also:
Persia; but the absence of the metatarsal knob, or incipient spur, suggests (in our ignorance of their other osteological characters) an
See also:
alliance rather to the genus Perdix .

On the other

hand the groups of birds known as Francolins and Snow-Partridges are generally furnished with strong but blunt spurs, and therefore probably belong to the Caccabine group . Of the former, containing many species, there is only
See also:
room here to mention the francolin, which used to be found in many parts of the south of Europe, Francolinus vulgaris, which also extends to India, where it is known as the black partridge . This seems to have been the Attagas or Attagen of classical authors,' a bird so celebrated for its exquisite flavour, the strange disappearance of which from all or nearly all its
See also:
European haunts still remains inexplicable . It is possible that this bird has been gradually vanishing for several centuries, and if so to this cause may be attributed the great uncertainty attending the determination of the Attagen—it being a common practice among men in all countries to apply the name of a species that is growing rare to some other that is still abundant . Of the snow-partridges, Tetraogallus, it is only to be said here that they are the giants of their kin, and that nearly every considerable range of mountains in Asia seems to possess its specific form . By English colonists the name Partridge has been very loosely applied, and especially so in North
See also:
America . Where a qualifying word is prefixed no confusion is caused, but without it there is sometimes a difficulty at first to know whether the Ruffed
See also:
Grouse (Bonasa umbellus) or the Virginia Quail (
See also:
Onyx virginianus) is intended . In South America the name is given to various Tinamous (q.v.) . (A .

End of Article: PARTRIDGE (Du. Patrijs, Fr. perdrix, from Lat. perdix, apparently onomatopoeic from the call of the bird)
[back]
PARTONOPEUS DE BLOIS
[next]
JOHN BERNARD PARTRIDGE (1861– )

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.