According to Greek legend, the first partridge appeared when
Daedalus threw his apprentice,
Talos, off the sacred hill of
Athena in a fit of jealous
rage. Supposedly mindful of his fall, the bird does not build its nest in the trees, nor take lofty flights and avoids high places. As described by medieval scholar
Madeleine Pelner Cosman, medical practitioners in the
Middle Ages recommended partridge as a food of love: They suggested that "Partridge was superior in arousing dulled passions and increasing the powers of engendering. Gentle to the human stomach, partridge stimulated bodily fluids, raised the spirits, and firmed the muscles." Probably the most famous reference to the partridge is in the Christmas carol, "
The Twelve Days of Christmas". The first gift listed is "a partridge in a
pear tree", and these words end each verse. Since partridges are unlikely to be seen in pear trees (they are ground-nesting birds) it has been suggested that the text "a pear tree" is a corruption of the French "
une perdrix" (a partridge). The partridge has also been used as a symbol that represents
Kurdish nationalism. It is called
Kew. Sherko Kurmanj discusses the paradox of symbols in Iraq as an attempt to make a distinction between the Kurds and the Arabs. He says that while Iraqis generally regards the palm tree, falcon, and sword as their national symbols, the Kurds consider the oak, partridge, and dagger as theirs. In Hinduism, the
Taittiriya Shakha of the
Krishna Yajurveda is named after the
tittiri, the Sanskrit word for partridge. According to legend, on the command of his angered guru
Vaishampayana,
Yajnavalkya regurgitates the Yajurveda. The other disciples of Vaisampayana transform themselves into partridges and eagerly pick up the jumbled, but complete, knowledge, explaining the namesake and the mixed format of the recension. ==Species list in taxonomic order==