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what family is the peacock in

by Conor Murazik Published 3 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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Peacock (or peafowl): any of three species of birds of the pheasant family Phasianidae. AKA: The male is a peacock, the female is a peahen and the babies are peachicks. All are peafowl.Aug 11, 2021

Full Answer

What birds are peacocks related to?

The Indian peafowl belongs to the pheasant and partridge subfamily (Phasianinae) of the large family of birds that also includes turkeys, quail, and grouse (Phasianidae). Wild birds in North America that are believed to be closely related to the peafowl include the ring-necked pheasant, gray partridge, and chukar.

Is the peacock in the turkey family?

While turkeys and peacocks are both unique looking, they are completely different species. They do not share enough chromosomal similarities for breeding to be a possibility. Even if you hear someone state they have seen a turkey peacock hybrid, it is simply not true.

Is peacock is a bird or animal?

The term "peacock" is commonly used to refer to birds of both sexes. Technically, only males are peacocks. Females are peahens, and together, they are called peafowl. Suitable males may gather harems of several females, each of which will lay three to five eggs.

What order is a peacock in?

LandfowlSaurischiaIndian peafowl/Order

Is the peacock in the pheasant family?

Peacocks and pheasants belong to the same family, phaianidae, which also includes turkeys, partridges and grouse. Although in the same family, the peacock (Pavo cristatus), also known as Indian peafowl and the pheasant (Phasianus colchicus) differ in size and color, and live in different parts of the world.

Are chicken and turkey related?

Chicken and turkey are two relatively closely related species; their genome similarities exhibit this despite approximately 40 million years of species divergence (21).

How does peacock get pregnant?

“The peacock is a lifelong Bhramachari (celibate). He never has sex with the peahen. The peahen pecks on the tears of the peacock to get pregnant. That's how she gives birth to a peacock or a peahen,” Justice MC Sharma declared.

Is a peacock a reptile?

Peacocks, also known as peafowl, are medium sized birds most closely related to pheasants. Peacocks inhabit warm climates of the Southern Hemisphere. All peacocks are believed to have originated in Asia, but they now inhabit Africa and parts of Australia.

Is a peacock a mammal or reptile?

Is a peacock a mammal? No. Peacocks are part of the Phasianidae family, which are birds.

Which kingdom is a peacock?

AnimalIndian peafowl / KingdomAnimals are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms in the biological kingdom Animalia. With few exceptions, animals consume organic material, breathe oxygen, are able to move, can reproduce sexually, and ... Wikipedia

Which is our national bird?

The Indian peacockThe Indian peacock, Pavo cristatus, the National Bird of India, is a colourful, swan-sized bird, with a fan-shaped crest of feathers, a white patch under the eye and a long, slender neck.

Is a peacock a bird of paradise?

By Christian adoption of old Persian and Babylonian symbolism, in which the peacock was associated with Paradise and the Tree of Life, the bird is again associated with immortality.

What is female turkey called?

Adult female turkeys are called hens. Juvenile females are called jennies. Adult females average half the size of male turkeys.

Are peacocks related to chickens?

Despite peacocks and chickens being birds, they are entirely different species. They aren't even classified in the same genus. What is this? Indian peafowl, the most common, is of the Pavo genus, while domesticated chickens belong to the Gallus genus.

Are guinea hens and peacocks related?

Scientists classify guinea fowl in the subfamily Numididae, which, in turn, is classified in the family Phasianidae. This is a large family of birds that also includes chickens, turkeys, pheasants, partridges, grouse, quail, and peafowl (peacocks).

Can chickens cross breed with turkeys?

Chicken and turkey hybrids There have been attempted crosses between domestic turkeys (Meleagris gallapavo) and chickens. According to Gray, no hybrids hatched in twelve studies. Other reports found only a few fertile eggs were produced and very few resulted in advance embryos.

How many lashes did Anthony Rope get?

Anthony Rope was given twenty lashes on two occasions for neglecting his work. He received a further 25 lashes in 1791 for buying shoes from a fellow convict. Despite this, he and his wife, who by now had two children, were granted 70 acres of land at The Ponds, two miles north-east of Parramatta, in December, 1791. They subsequently had six more children, and ran a farm on South Creek, between Penrith and Windsor (then called Green Hills). The second child, Mary Rope, from the age of about sixteen, lived with Lieutenant Thomas Hobby, an officer of the NSW Corps who had arrived in Sydney in 1798 and was Commandant in the Hawkesbury district where he was granted 100 acres of land at Mulgrave. It was common for officers of the Marine Corps, and later of the NSW Corps, to take wives without benefit of clergy, some of them having wives back in England. Hobby was in a different category, since he had brought his wife out with him; she was childless, and he set her up in a house in Sydney and took Mary Rope into his house at Mulgrave. She bore him two, perhaps three, children, and then married Michael Ryan, an emancipist. Hobby was one of the ringleaders of the Rum Rebellion against Governor Bligh, actually one of the three officers who went to Government House to arrest him. Hobby's Yards, near Blayney, bears his name, but what connection he had with this place is not known. Michael and Mary Ryan's son, T J Ryan, became a Member of Parliament in New South Wales, a prominent racehorse owner, a very successful farmer and a philanthropist. The second child of Thomas Hobby and Mary Rope, Elanor Hobby, married John Shute, the father of Henry and George Shute. John Shute was himself a convict, born near Bristol, and transported to Sydney on the Malabar in 1819 at the age of nineteen. He and Elanor settled in the Bathurst district, evidently on the Campbell's River, and are buried at Georges Plains.

Where are the Yorkshire Moors?

NORTH-EAST FROM BOLTON AND ROCHDALE across the Pennine Mountains lie the Yorkshire Moors. The Peacock family migrated to Australia from the industrial city of Bradford in Yorkshire but the family came from the districts of Middleham, Coverham and Masham in the North Riding of Yorkshire, where the moors are rugged and more desolate than those north and east of Bolton in Lancashire. On the Yorkshire Moors we are in the kind of country described by Emily Bronte in Wuthering Heights. 1 The countryside can be windswept, bleak and snow-covered; but it has an enchanting beauty and even a green softness along the Ure and Cover Rivers. There is very little arable land; the subsoil is shale and limestone, with some alluvial soil along the rivers. Coal and lead in reasonable quantities were once mined in these districts; but the chief occupations are agricultural, the growing of hay and potatoes. The hay is used mainly for horses; the low moor on the south side of Middleham is a celebrated training ground for racehorses. The greater part of the countryside is mountainous, with cliffs of hundreds of feet and peaks of two thousand feet. The moors themselves are wild, blizzard-swept, sparsely inhabited by humans, but teeming with curlews, plovers, lapwings, gulls and grouse. Swaledale sheep (taking their name from the next valley to the north) graze on the uplands around lonely farms such as we saw in the television series All Creatures Great and Small. Sinuous streams between steep banks or undulating folds, with occasional fords for traffic, swell the River Ure as the winter snows melt, in places tumbling over spectacular waterfalls. Cottages on farms and in towns are of grey stone, frequently plastered over; stones also provide boundary fences and farm buildings.

Where are William Peacock's grandparents?

Temple House, west Witton. Home of William Peacock's grandparents, Jonathan and Jane Peacock. The Peacocks are more prevalent in Swaledale, a little further north. Peacocks are still plentiful there today; our branch of the family migrated from further north to Wensleydale (where Middleham and West Witton are), and to Coverdale and Masham. There is strong, though not irrefutable, evidence that {joaktree person|1|I281|extended}'s grandfather, {joaktree person|1|I287|extended}, though he was married and buried at Carlton in the Coverham Parish, was baptised in the Romaldkirk Parish. 4 This Jonathan Peacock, if he is ours, was a yeoman farmer whose children have names that fit the family pattern and were registered when baptised as living at Foulsyke, in the Romaldkirk Parish. There is a farm there today called "Fell Syke", near Baldersdale. Romaldkirk is thirty odd miles north east of Wensleydale and Coverham, on the River Tee, near Barnard Castle and Darlington, much closer to the east coast of Yorkshire, and very close to the northern limits of the North Riding. This Jonathan Peacock's son, also Jonathan Peacock [JP4], married {joaktree person|1|I288|extended}, whose name derives from the town of Pickering which is also closer to the eastern coast.

What is the name of the bird that is spelt peacock?

In Old English, or Anglo-Saxon, that language used in England before the Norman Conquest in 1066, the name of the bird which is spelt peacock today was spelt peacocc . In Middle English (11th to 14th centuries) it was spelt pecok, pacock and pocock. The Irish variant is, of course, paycock. The family of this name referred to in the Domesday Book is recorded both as Pecock and Paycock in the Essex Subsidy Rolls in 1327, but their name has also been recorded as Peacock in 1194. A Reginald or Reynold Peacock, described in Maunder's Biographical Treasury (1851) as a "worthy and learned prelate", was successively Bishop of St Asaph and of Chichester, by favour of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, the same one who occupied Middleham Castle, but he was deposed for resisting Papal authority and denying the doctrine of trans-substantiation and other articles of faith. He was required to recant and his books were publicly burnt, after which he was confined in Thorney Abbey where he died in 1460. His parentage is unknown but the Elizabethan historians Leland, Gascoigne and others said that he was born in Wales. There is documentary evidence that he grew up in Wales and that he went to Oriel College, Oxford, and was elected a Fellow there on October 30, 1417. He became an authority on the Lollards, a prominent group of religious dissenters at that time, and most of his books were written to persuade them of their errors.

What occupation did William Peacock have?

WILLIAM AND REBECCA PEACOCK left Bradford in 1841, again to escape poverty and probably also the threat of violence which was becoming a real problem in Bradford as a result of the agitation of Chartist groups. William Peacock's occupation is given as Comber in the Marriage Register and Ploughman in the Shipping Record (since there would have been no demand for a comber in Australia). The Shipping Record also indicates that Rebecca is a Farm Worker. William would have had farming experience back in the Yorkshire Dales. William signed the Marriage Register but Rebecca marked it with a cross. Three children, Elizabeth, Robert and Richard, were born at Bradford and accompanied their parents to Sydney on the Elizabeth, which sailed from Liverpool on April 29, 1841, and arrived in Sydney on August 23, 1841. 24 They were assisted migrants sponsored by A B Smith and Co (who had also sponsored Andrew and Sarah Hamer). The Shipping Record gives the names of William's parents as Pickering and Anna - no doubt the recording clerk did not catch the aspirate - and Pickering is described as a farmer. The Record indicates that both William and Rebecca can read and write, despite the evidence of the Marriage Register six years earlier.Under the heading: "State of bodily health and probable usefulness", it is stated that Rebecca is "Recovering from prem..... confinement." The word abbreviated here is obscured in the binding of the Record, but it can be no other than "premature". In fact, a child was born on August 25, 1841, two days after the ship arrived, and died on the same day. Despite the existence of an older Elizabeth, this baby was called Elizabeth, no doubt in honour of the ship that had brought them safely around the world on a voyage into the unknown. Unfortunately, the ship was not entirely benevolent: a family tradition relates that little Richard had eaten paint on board ship and was suffering from lead poisoning. The young family, full of hope for their prospects in a new land, buried their premature baby in Sydney a couple of days after their arrival and hurried by road to Bathurst.

What were the hopes of Bob Peacock's children?

But the aspirations of the two sons were frustrated. It appears that Robert had stayed on for a few years on the Campbell's River, after venturing for a time into Queensland but he didn't stay there long. William leased a farm at Georges Plains from Francis Croaker, of "Shiraz", Perth, on "The Island", between the Vale Creek and the Georges Plains Creek, on the property known as "Denton Holme" (the word holme meaning island). Robert was on his father's farm on the Campbell's River when his three eldest daughters were born: Sa rah [WP21] in 1858; Janie [WP22] in 1860; and Becky [WP23] in 1862. The fourth daughter, Bella [WP24] was born at Ipswich, Queensland, in 1864; but according to the Electoral Roll he was back in the White Rock subdivision in 1869. He appears on the Roll at the Vale Road address in 1877 33. He leased a farm on "Harrington", adjoining the Hamers; and he and William Junior are both described on the Roll as leaseholders. The chaffcutter accident occurred in May 1877, so Robert must have still been on the Campbell's River at that stage; and may have moved immediately afterwards. Alternatively, he may have left his chaffcutter operating in that locality for a few years after moving.

What was Rebecca Peacock's job?

Looking at the photograph above, one can believe it. It was one of her jobs to take the produce of their farm to Bathurst in a horse-drawn cart. 27 Mutual cooperation and bartering between neighbours were common practices in those days which the Peacocks certainly engaged in. Unfortunately, this creates the potential for disputation. There is a report in the Bathurst Free Press and Mining Journal of April 5, 1851 - the embellished title was adopted almost as soon as the gold rush began - of a court case between the Peacocks and a neighbour named Lynch, with whom they had an arrangement to exchange wheat and vegetables and to assist one another by the loan of horses and harness and in taking produce to market. The trouble arose when Lynch lent the Peacocks sixteen and a half bushels of wheat in June, 1850, for sowing, to be returned after harvest. The Peacocks had from time to time supplied Lynch with potatoes and other vegetables and had lent him a horse, saddle and bridle. The difficulty now was that, whereas wheat was worth 2s 9d per bushel in June,1850, Lynch was now demanding repayment at the new price of 7s 3d, inflated by the demand generated by the gold rush. Mrs Peacock claimed that she had already partly paid for the wheat in vegetables and potatoes. Lynch conceded the potatoes, but claimed that the vegetables were left by Mrs Peacock only when she could not sell them in Bathurst; and, in any case, Mrs Peacock had frequently been entertained by Mrs Lynch with pumpkin pie and Johnny cake on her way to and from Bathurst. The judges had no hesitation in finding in favour of the Peacocks. 28

What is the spelling of the name Peacock?

As the English language evolved in the Middle Ages, the spelling of names changed also. The name Peacock has undergone many spelling variations, including Peacock, Peacocke and others.

How popular is the name Peacock?

In the United States, the name Peacock is the 1,609 th most popular surname with an estimated 19,896 people with that name. [12] However, in Australia, the name Peacock is ranked the 786 th most popular surname with an estimated 4,958 people with that name. [13] And in New Zealand, the name Peacock is the 679 th popular surname with an estimated 1,047 people with that name. [14] The United Kingdom ranks Peacock as 426 th with 15,212 people. [15]

Why did people board ships for the New World?

To escape the unstable social climate in England of this time, many families boarded ships for the New World with the hope of finding land, opportunity, and greater religious and political freedom. Although the voyages were expensive, crowded, and difficult, those families that arrived often found greater opportunities and freedoms than they could have experienced at home. Many of those families went on to make significant contributions to the rapidly developing colonies in which they settled. Early North American records indicate many people bearing the name Peacock were among those contributors:

Where did the Peacock family come from?

Peacock migration to Canada +. Some of the first settlers of this family name were: John Peacock, aged 19, a farmer, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1833 aboard the ship "Britannia" from Sligo, Ireland. John Peacock, aged 12, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1834 aboard the barque "Ceres" from Sligo, Ireland.

Where did the name Peacock come from?

The name Peacock comes from the ancient Anglo-Saxon culture of Britain. It was a name for a peacock, a nickname used also as a personal name. [1] [2] [3] Or the name could denote a "dweller at the sign of the peacock; one with the qualities of a peacock.". [4]

Where did John Peacock arrive?

John Peacock, aged 12, who arrived in Saint John, New Brunswick in 1834 aboard the barque "Ceres" from Sligo, Ireland

Where did Sampson Peacock land?

Sampson Peacock, who landed in Allegany (Allegheny) County, Pennsylvania in 1844 [16]

What is the meaning of the name Peacock?

Peacock stems from the pre-seventh-century word peacock, an occupational name for someone who raises peacocks or someone who takes exceptional care and pride in his appearance. Some other spellings of the name are Peacocke, Pacock, Pocock, and Peecock.

Where is Richard Pocok from?

The ancestral home is found in Durham.

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Early Origins of The Peacock Family

  • The Peacock family were said to be one of, if not the oldest family in Home, having been around …
    In 1986, the Peacock parents got into a horrible ca
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Early History of The Peacock Family

Peacock Spelling Variations

Early Notables of The Peacock Family

  • The surname Peacock was first found inEssex, where the name Pecoc was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086. From this earliest record of the family, we move to Cornwall where Roger Paucoc was listed in the Pipe Rolls for 1194. Years later in Somerset, the Assize Rolls there listed Richard Pocock in 1225 and in Yorkshire, Simon Pacock was listed in t...
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Peacock World Ranking

  • This web page shows only a small excerpt of our Peacock research. Another 229 words (16 lines of text) covering the years 1300, 1612, 1510, 1596, 1601, 1631, 1843, 1598, 1673, 1652, 1652, 1707, 1516, 1582, 1516, 1528, 1541, 1534, 1534, 1535, 1537, 1554, 1653, 1647, 1649, 1648, 1649, 1650, 1650, 1651 and are included under the topic Early Peacock History in all our PDF Extende…
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Migration of The Peacock Family to Ireland

  • Only recently has spelling become standardized in the English language. As the English language evolved in the Middle Ages, the spelling of names changed also. The name Peacock has undergone many spelling variations, including Peacock, Peacocke and others.
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1.peacock | Facts & Habitat | Britannica

Url:https://www.britannica.com/animal/peacock

34 hours ago  · Peacock Genealogy & History. Peacock stems from the pre-seventh-century word peacock, an occupational name for someone who raises peacocks or someone who takes …

2.Peacock family | X-Files Wiki | Fandom

Url:https://x-files.fandom.com/wiki/Peacock_family

10 hours ago  · "Jan is the oldest daughter of Bob and Mary Ann Broberg and leads a happy, traditional life in an idyllic American city," Peacock describes her onscreen persona. "Jan trusts …

3.Peacock History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms

Url:https://www.houseofnames.com/peacock-family-crest

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Url:https://www.archives.com/genealogy/family-history-peacock.html

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5.Videos of What Family Is The Peacock in

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Url:https://parade.com/tv/a-friend-of-the-family-peacock

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7.A Friend Of The Family: 6 Things Peacock's True Crime …

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