This eagle was originally described as
Astur kienerii on the basis of a specimen from the Himalayas. It was later moved to
Limnaetus by
Jerdon, the genus
Lophotriorchis and still later to
Hieraaetus, the so-called "hawk-eagles". A study of the phylogeny of some
Hieraaetus species and other eagles indicated that they were nested within the
Aquila clade of eagles, resulting in their repositioning. Another molecular study of the eagles suggested that
kienerii was distinctive enough to be retained in a separate genus for which the name
Kienastur had been suggested but as this occurred in a thesis it is invalid for
taxonomic purposes, and in any case
Lophotriorchis was proposed
much earlier (though originally shared with the
Black-and-chestnut eagle which is nowadays placed in
Spizaetus). Within its wide range, two subspecies are recognized although there is no marked plumage difference. The nominate
kienerii of India and Sri Lanka (the northern birds are larger); and
formosus described by
Erwin Stresemann in 1924 which is widely distributed across Southeast Asia from Burma to Sulawesi. The species name was given by Count
Louis Ernest Gustave de Sparre (1802-1866) and honours the French naturalist
Louis Charles Kiener (1799-1881). ==Description==