The demoiselle crane was
formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae. He placed it with the herons and cranes in the
genus Ardea and coined the
binomial name Ardea virgo. He specified the
type locality as the orient but this has been restricted to India. Linnaeus cited the accounts by earlier authors. The English naturalist
Eleazar Albin had described and illustrated the "Numidian crane" in 1738. Albin explained that: "This Bird is called Demoiselles by reason of certain ways of acting that it has, wherein it seems to imitate the Gestures of a Woman who affects a Grace in her Walking, Obeisances, and Dancing". Linnaeus also cited the English naturalist
George Edwards who had described and illustrated the "Demoiselle of Numidia" in 1750. The name "la demoiselle de Numidie" had been used in 1676 by the French naturalist
Claude Perrault. The demoiselle crane is now placed in the genus
Grus that was introduced in 1760 by the French zoologist
Mathurin Jacques Brisson. The species is treated as
monospecific: no
subspecies are recognised. The genus name
Grus is the
Latin word for a "crane". The specific epithet
virgo is Latin meaning "maiden". Some authorities place this species together with the closely related
blue crane (
Grus paradisea) in the genus
Anthropoides. == Description ==