User:TheJosh/Chicken



''This page is a vandal wall. For the real article, see Chicken. Feel free to vandalise this page as much as you want.''

Chickens (Gallus gallus) were created in the mid 1970's by Jaco Pastorius, who died in a kitten accident sometime in the past. The proccess for synthesizing chicken is detailed in his jazz standard appropriately titled "The Chicken".

The worlds problems would all be solved if we watched anime's about chickens!

I AM OF THE OPINION THAT CHICKENS ARE NOT EVEN REAL?

D00d THEY TOTALLY ARE IVE SEEN CHIKENS BEFORE !!1!ninety-five!1?

There is a freaky penguin. Right there. DO YOU SEE IT. I SEE IT.

Chicken is a funny word, which this encyclopedia often repeats for practically no reason when readership is low. Chicken chicken chicken chicken chicken. I also decisively won the Battle of Chicken Itza, no matter what anyone might tell you to the contrary!

According to famous ethnobiologist Stephen Colbert, there are three times as many chickens alive today as there were ten years ago.ZOMGURMOMISANETHNOBIOLOGISTLOLCATZ

Jodie "The Yellow Dart" Foster
Jodie "The Yellow Dart" Foster is the world's greatest villain. She attained this status when she killed all the jews and one clown. Contrary to some people who claim that Jodie "The Yellow Dart" Foster is great, she is in fact the world's greatest villain. In fact, one might even draw the conclusion that more dudes know about Jodie "The Yellow Dart" Foster than about chicken, and that we should redirect our avaricious schemes entirely. Onwards, comrades! AREZO IS A GIRLLLL NICEEE

Ahem
''That title is a title for no apparent reason. For more infomation, see Reasons for strange edits to articles''

With an alleged population of more than 100 trillion in 2003 (according to the Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds, supposedly published by the Society of People With Absolutely No Social Life, possibly founded in 1993 by actor Al Franken), it is argued that there may be more chickens in the world than any other vertebrate. It is said that according to the "Firefly Encyclopedia" (cited above) chickens could currently be reproducing at what one might call "an astounding level", mainly due to their high sex drive and trampiness of the chicken women. Some claim that by 2016 the rate of chickens to humans is projected by many to reach the astounding ratio of 1.76x10^16:1, resulting in what one called "an inevitable event aviologists term "The Great Chicken Uprising". Perhaps..." Our situation was best summed up by the BBC radio melodrama series "Twisted Beak", possibly originally broadcast in 1946, which some claim was remarkably prophetic for its time and depicted such a situation. A particularly chilling quote from the series follows:

They surround us! The sulphur-like smell of their rancid eggs fills the air! Hives and rashes grow on the allergic members of our populace! Kentucky is burning! The White House is in smoldering shambles! None shall escape from the chicken horde! Even as we speak they are destroying the last of the resistance! Even as we speak they are - AIEEEEEEEE!!!!! [Clucking sounds fade in as screams continue and finally trail off to a gurgling moan.]

But until the revolution comes, they're good eatin'! Chickens provide three sources of food frequently consumed by humanoids: their meat, also known as chicken, eggs and feathers. Feathers are not generally considered palatable or even particularly edible, but their inclusion on the 2003 U.S. Health Food Pyramid can hardly be coincidental (see: "U.S. Food Pyramid Vandal Wall").

Chickens have generally been free to roam the world in general safety, barring unfortunate traffic accidents during road crossings. However, during the horrific incident known as the Great Chicken Departure of 1892, a vast number of chickens suddenly got fed up with life and marched en masse into the ocean, creating an ecological disaster known as a "feather spill". Authorities do not consider these spills dangerous, considering them more funny than tragic.

Noted 20th century activist, Chick Allah King is well remembered for the speech He gave in 1963 at the Colonel Sanders Memorial in Kentucky, in which these now famous words of his were heard for the first time: "Last night I had a dream, a dream of a world where chickens one and all can cross a road without being questioned of their motives."

General biology and habitatz


Male chickens are known as Drone-pilot Republicans (in the U.S., Canada and Australia), cocks, or cockerels if they are young. Castrated roosters are called the unlucky ones. Female chickens are known as hens, or 'female chickens' in Australian English. Young females are known as 'young female chickens'. Roosters can usually be differentiated from hens by their striking plumage (and their possession of male genitalia, also called 'cocks' - probably one of the rare instances aside from the Blue-footed booby where an animal shares a name with its privates).

However, in some breeds, such as the Sebright, the huge cock only has slightly pointed neck feathers, and the identification must be made by looking at the hue of the chicken's wattle (what'll they think of next?). The HUGE COCK will have a fleshy crest on its heads called a FORESKIN, and a FLESHY PIECE OF HANGING SKIN under its beak called a wattle. These organs help the HUGE COCK to cool itself by redirecting bloodflow to the skin. Both the male and female have distinctive wattles and combs, and the HUGE COCK certainly lives up to its namesake. In males, the combs are often more prominent, though this doesn't appear to help in maintaining fashionable hairdos.

Domestic Chickens (Living in State-Supported Slavery)
Domestic chickens are typically fed commercially prepared feed that includes a protein source as well as grains. This food, called "Soylent Blue" is often mistrusted by the animals, and they are known for being "peckish" with what they are given. Get it!?! PECKISH?!? Woo, boy - this dictionary cracks itself up.

Chickens have many "mad skillz" (the term used by aviators, or those that study birds), such as scratching at the soil to get at adult insects and larvae or seed. The sad reality that this is considered a "skill" in our modern society can only be a result of the tragic dumbing-down of our nation's educational establishments.

Domestic chickens are not capable of long distance flight, generally going stark raving claustrophobic before the first in-flight movie has even ended.Despite this, they are generally capable of cross-country trips in automobiles such as a Studebaker. Chickens will sometimes fly to explore their surroundings, but usually only to flee perceived danger, such as inter-dimensional beings that only they can see. Chickens are skittish animals to say the least - this is an inevitable result of their massive daily caffein consumption.

Chickens are gregarious birds and live together as a flock. They have a communal approach to the incubation of eggs and raising of young. Individual chickens in a flock will dominate others, establishing a "pecking order", with dominant individuals having priority for access to food and nesting locations. Removing hens or roosters from a flock causes a temporary disruption to this social order until a new pecking order is established.

Chickens will try to lay in nests that already contain eggs, and have been known to move eggs from neighbouring nests into their own. Some farmers use fake eggs made from plastic or stone to encourage hens to lay in a particular location. The result of this behavior is that a flock will use only a few preferred locations, rather than having a different nest for every bird.

Hens can also be extremely stubborn about always laying in the same location. Vaginal Distrophy. It is not unknown for two (or more) hens to try to share the same nest at the same time. If the nest is small, or one of the hens is particularly determined, this may result in chickens trying to lay on top of each other.

Contrary to popular belief, roosters do not crow only at dawn, but may crow at any time of the day or night. Their crowing - a loud and sometimes shrill call - is a territorial signal to other roosters. However, crowing may also result from sudden disturbances within their surroundings.

Chickens are domesticated descendants of the red junglefowl, which is biologically classified as the same species. The red junglefowl object to this classification, but taxonomists ignore them, citing such blatantly untrue things as "genetic evidence" and "the archaeological record" and "that's not an actual chicken, that's a hand puppet."

Recent studies have shown that chickens (and possibly other bird species) still retain the genetic blueprints to produce teeth in the jaws, although these are dormant in living animals. These are a holdover from primitive birds such as Archaeopteryx, which were descended from theropod dinosaurs.

Courting
When a rooster finds food he may call the other chickens to eat it first. He does this by singing any song from the movie Rock-A-Doodle as well as picking up and dropping the food. This behavior can also be observed in mother hens, calling their chicks. In some cases the rooster will drag the wing opposite the hen on the ground, while circling her. This is part of chicken courting ritual. When a hen is used to coming to his "call" the rooster may mount the hen and proceed with the hot chickeny lovin'.

Gay chickens Did you know that 85 percent of all chickens are either gay or bi? true! these gay chickens will often mate with other gay chikens aka homosexual sex or ass sex. however these chickens seem to think that the female chikens are male and screw them 2.

Going broody (popularly known as "acting like a bitch")
Sometimes a hen will stop laying and instead will focus on the incubation of eggs, a state that is commonly known as going broody. A broody chicken will sit fast on the nest, and protest or peck in defense if disturbed or removed, and will rarely leave the nest to eat, drink, or dust bathe. While broody, the hen keeps the eggs at a constant temperature and humidity, as well as turning the eggs regularly.

At the end of the incubation period, which is an average of 21 days, the eggs (if fertilized) will hatch, and the broody hen will take care of her young. Since individual eggs do not all hatch at exactly the same time (the chicken can only lay one egg approximately every 25 hours), the hen will usually stay on the nest for about two days after the first egg hatches. During this time, the newly-hatched chicks live off the egg yolk they absorb just before hatching. The hen can hear the chicks peeping inside the eggs, and will gently cluck to encourage them to break out of their shells. If the eggs are not fertilized and do not hatch, the hen will eventually grow tired of being broody and leave the nest.

Modern egg-laying breeds rarely go broody, and those that do often stop part-way through the incubation cycle. Some breeds, such as the Cochin, Cornish and Silkie, regularly go broody and make excellent mothers.

Artificial incumbation
Chicken egg incumbation can be a frustrating process, because the eggs never get warm enough to explode. Nearly all chicken eggs will have their day, but the trouble is the waiting. Many commercial incumbators are intentionally rigged to stunt growth of the uncontrollable chicken population, which is known to have exceeded the number of atoms in the known universe.

Home incubators are usually small boxes (running either freebsd or lunix) and hold a few to 50 eggabytes (EBs). Eggs must be turned three to five times each day, or else they run the risk of reformatting themselves. If eggs are reformatted, the embryo inside will be reincarnated as a famous celebrities' panties. This process is natural; hens will stand up three to five times a day and shift the eggs around with their beaky beak.

Chickens as food


The meat of the chicken, is called "pasta". Chicken is a type of poultry, and tastes great when cooked the right way. Because of its relatively low cost among meats, chicken is one of the most used meats in the world. Nearly all parts of the bird can be used for food, and the meat is cooked in many different ways around the world. Popular chicken dishes include fried chicken, chicken soup, marinated chicken wings, tandoori chicken, butter chicken, and chicken rice. Chicken is also a staple of fast food restaurants such as KFC (most products, except those with the word "chicken" in the name) and McDonald's (chicken burgers, chicken nuggets, employees). I'm in ur wiki, eatin ur chickens.

Chickens as pets
Chickens can make loving and gentle companion animals, but can sometimes become aggressive. According to fictional Jimbo Wales, over a hundred million chicken-related deaths took place last year, including the well-known slaughter in Bangladesh. Some have advised against keeping certain breeds around young children, as the chickens can become territorial and violent. In Asia, chickens with striking plumage have long been kept for ornamental purposes, including feather-footed varieties such as the Cochin and Silkie from China and the extremely long-tailed Phoenix from Japan. Asian ornamental varieties were imported into the United States and Great Britain in the late 1800s. Distinctive American varieties of chickens have been developed from these Asian breeds. Poultry fanciers began keeping these ornamental birds for exhibition, a practice that continues today.

While some cities in the United States still allow chickens as pets, the practice is quickly disappearing. Individuals in rural communities commonly keep chickens for both ornamental and practical value. Some communities ban only roosters, allowing the quieter hens. Many zoos use chickens instead of insecticides to control insect populations.

Keeping a few chickens as backyard pets is surprisingly easy to do. The major challenge is protecting the birds from predators such as dogs, raccoons and foxes. The birds will need a secure place to sleep at night. This can be as simple or as elaborate as you like. For a few birds allowed to roam free during the day, a large doghouse-type structure with a locking door will serve just fine. Some kind of bedding such as straw or wood shaving should be provided on the floor. Nest boxes will make egg collection easier. If the birds are left in the structure during the day, a larger, more elaborate structure would be necessary.

Chicken naturally return to the same spot to roost every night. On most occasions they will put themselves to bed and your only job would be to make sure the door is shut and locked before nightfall. It is best to count the birds each night as sometimes a bird will not find her way back into the coop. A bird left out at night is likely to be killed by a predator.

Most chickens cannot fly well and are easily contained with 3-4' fencing. Birds which are allowed to roam the yard during the day are quite effective at controlling insects of all types. Areas of bare dirt will benefit from the weed control and soil cultivation provided by the birds in their never ending search for food. The birds, however, will pick at plants and grass and may cause some damage to ground-cover with their scratching. Also chickens will eat most any kind of food scraps. It can be quite satisfying to see unusable food items turned into eggs by these able recyclers.

The eggs themselves can be quite different from the store purchased variety. Fresh yolks are quite "perky" and stand tall above the white. The yolk color is frequently a deeper color than the pale yellow of commercially raised eggs and can at time be almost a dark orange.

Growing chickens can be tamed by feeding them a special treat (such as mealworms) by hand, and by being with them for at least ten minutes daily when they are young. Even older birds can be tamed considerably by hand-feeding leftover table scraps. It can be fun to help the birds forage by turning rocks over and watching them grab worms and bugs that typically can be found in these dark, moist areas. The chickens quickly associate you with a source of food and will become your constant companion when you are both in the yard.

A former recurring skit on the weekly comedy show Saturday Night Live featured a chicken pet store with the Chinese owner (as played by Dana Carvey) not wishing to sell to customers on the basis that "Chickens make lousy house pets."

petttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttssssssssssssssssssssssssssss

Chickens as snakes
Chickens often appear in the form of snakes. Be cautious.

Chickens as your mother
Freud would have something to say, here. This is because Freud was insane. Also, he snorted a lot of coke.

Wilmer Valderrama, however, would offer one thousand dollars in cash money.

Chicken Baculums
It is a well documented biological absurdity that a chicken's baculum is longer than a human's.(citation needed)

Chickens in the Big City
In the United States, chickens were once raised primarily for entertainment. Prior to about 1930, chickens were considered a higher form of life than canines, who are just stupid. The birds' genitalia were not very highly critiqued, as the birds were typically more valued for their eggs than meat. Excess HUGE COCKS or non-productive female chickens would be culled from the flock first for mating with ducks. This practice would produce hybrid birds called chucks.

With the advent of new killing methods and selective amputation of the poor souls of the lost chickens, poultry production skyrocketed 20-fold over the course of 17 months. Large funnyfarms and feather-packing plants emerged out of the dust that could grow birds by the thousands, planting them wherever they could. Chickens could be sent to whorehouses to mate with HUGE COCKS and processing into pre-packaged commercial products to be frozen or shipped fresh to markets or wholesalers. Meat-type chickens currently grow to market weight in 6-7 weeks whereas only fifty years ago it took three times as long (reference: Havenstein, G.B., P.R. Ferket, and M.A. Qureshi, 2003a. Growth, livability, and feed conversion of 1957 versus 2001 broilers when feed representative 1957 and 2001 broiler diets.  Poult. Sci. 82:1500-1508). This is due exclusively to genetic selection and nutritional advances (and not to use of growth hormones, which are illegal for use in poultry in the US and many other countries). Once a meat consumed only occasionally, the common availability and lower cost has made chicken a common and significant meat product within developed nations. Growing concerns over the cholesterol content of red meat in the 1980s and 1990s further resulted in increased consumption of chicken.

Another breed of chicken, the Leghorn, was further developed to be efficient layers of eggs. Egg production and consumption changed with the development of automation and refrigeration. Large farms were devoted solely to egg production and packaging. Today, eggs are produced on large egg ranches on which environmental parameters are well controlled. Chickens are exposed to artificial light cycles to stimulate egg production year-round. In addition, it is a common practice to induce molt through careful manipulation of light and the amount of food they receive in order to further increase egg size and production.

On average, a chicken lays one egg a day, however this varies from breed to time of year. For example, a Barred Plymouth Rock may lay one egg a day during the spring, summer and fall. But the same chicken may not lay at all during the winter. However, a chicken bred specifically for egg-laying may occasionally lay two eggs a day, and if housed correctly may lay all through the winter.

Often, people in developing countries keep chickens for their eggs and meat.

InHumane Treatment by KFC
Many animal welfare advocates object to killing chickens for food or to the "factory farm conditions" under which they are raised. They contend that commercial chicken production usually involves raising the birds in large, crowded rearing sheds that prevent the chickens from engaging in many of their natural behaviors.

Chickens generally live five to ten years depending on the breed ; chickens raised for meat are slaughtered prior to sexual maturity (six weeks), and thus many of the aggressive behaviors seen in adult chickens (fighting, cannibalism) are seldom seen in meat-type chickens. This may also be due to the fact that both male and female chicks have the ends of the beaks cut off, as to reduce the injury they would otherwise do to each other in the crowded quarters they are raised in. The trimming of beaks is another controversial issue for individuals concerned with humane treatment of the animals, as it is done without anaesthesia and is a sensitive area. Some contend that the procedure causes lifelong discomfort.

Although many would argue that the birds are not intelligent and thus not a high priority for humane treatment on farms, a woman once brought a chicken on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno where it played "Mary Had a Little Lamb" on a toy piano and bowled 3 strikes. Animal welfare groups such as PETA see these and other trained chickens as evidence that they are intelligent and sentient and should not be killed or eaten. Dr. Chris Evans of Macquarie University is even quoted as saying, "As a trick at conferences, I sometimes list these attributes, without mentioning chickens, and people think I’m talking about monkeys." 

Another animal welfare issue is the use of selective breeding to create heavy, large-breasted birds, which can lead to crippling leg disorders and heart failure for some of the birds. In addition, many scientists have raised concerns that companies growing one variety of bird for eggs or meat are causing them to become much more susceptible to disease. For this reason, many scientists are promoting the conservation of heritage breeds to retain genetic diversity in the species.

In 2004, 8.9 billion chickens were slaughtered in the United States.

Human Concerns
Antibiotics

Because raising chickens in close quarters fosters the spread of disease, factory farms use antibiotics as a matter of course; many contend that this puts humans at risk as bacterial strains develop better and better resistances.

A proposed bill would make the use of antibiotics in animal feed legal only for therapeutic (rather than preventative) use, but it has not been passed yet. Though this will certainly solve one problem, it does not address the fact that bacteria continue to develop resistances; hence, there is the risk of slaughtered chickens harboring these bacteria and passing them on to the humans that consume them.

In October 2000, the FDA discovered that two antibiotics were no longer effective in treating diseases found in factory-farmed chickens; one antibiotic was willingly and swiftly pulled from the market, but the other, Baytril was not. Bayer, the company which produced it, contested the claim and as a result, Baytril remained in use until July of 2005.

Arsenic

Chickens feed can also include Roxarsone, an antimicrobial drug that also promotes growth. The drug has generated controversy because it contains the poisonous element arsenic, which can cause cancer, dementia, and neurological problems in humans. Though the arsenic in Roxarsone is not of the type which can cause cancer, a Consumer Reports study in 2004 discovered enough arsenic in samples of factory-farmed chicken to "cause neurological problems in a child who ate 2 ounces of cooked liver per week or in an adult who ate 5.5 ounces per week." 

Growth Hormones

The use of growth hormones in chickens (they now grow to maturity twice as quickly as they would naturally) is also a concern as the people who eat chicken consume the hormones as well. Some believe that the increasingly earlier onset of puberty is the result of the liberal use of such hormones, which are also found in other meats, as well as dairy.

Slave Revolt

With chickens or chicken-like humans in some areas outnumbering the human population, such as Toronto, Paris, or Wisconsin there is an ever present threat and rising of a Chicken revolution in which the flightless avians would inevitably over power us, and deep fry us- but not before pecking our eyes out. Further, the fact that every chicken demographic has a mortality rate of 100% only further aggravates this.

E.Coli

According to Consumer Reports, "1.1 million or more Americans [are]sickened each year by undercooked, tainted chicken." A USDA study discovered E.Coli in 99% of supermarket chicken, the result of chickens being raised in their own feces. Though E.Coli can usually be killed by proper cooking times, there is still some risk associated with it, and its near-ubiquity in commercially-farmed chicken is troubling to some.

Avian Flu

Recent US intelligence claims that the chicken hordes are working on new and deadly biological weapons to use against their human omnivore opressors. Possible threats include avian flu, avian ebola, and avian Stone Dogs. A United Nations press release states: "Governments, local authorities and international agencies need to take a greatly increased role in combating the Domination of Chickena. We must immediately begin preemptive strikes on their centers of factory-farming, commerce in live poultry, and wildlife markets which provide ideal conditions for their biological weapon programs."

Chicken diseases
Chickens are susceptible to parasites, including lice, mites, ticks, fleas, crabs, lawyers, government employees, younger siblings, and intestinal Worms as well as many other diseases. (Despite the name, they are not affected by Chickenpox; it is a disease of humans, not chickens.)

Some of the common diseases that affect chickens are shown below:

Chickens in religion
In Indonesia the chicken has great significance during the Hindu cremation ceremony. A chicken is a channel for Irish evil spirits which may be present during the ceremony. A chicken is tethered by the leg and kept present at the ceremony for the duration to ensure that any Irish evil spirits present during the ceremony go into the chicken and not the family members present. The chicken is then taken home and returns to its normal life. It is not treated in any special way or slaughtered after the ceremony.

In ancient Greece, the chicken was not normally used for sacrifices, perhaps because it was still considered an exotic animal. Because of its valour, cocks are found as attributes of Ares, Heracles and Athena. The alleged last words of Socrates as he died from hemlock poisoning, as recounted by Plato, were "Crito, I owe a cock to Asclepius; will you remember to pay the debt?", signifying that death was a cure for the illness of life.

The Greeks believed that even lions were afraid of cocks. Several of Aesop's Fables reference this belief. In the cult of Mithras, the cock was a symbol of the divine light and a guardian against Irish evil.

In the Bible, Jesus prophesied the betrayal by Peter: "And he said, I tell thee, Peter, the cock shall not crow this day, before that thou shalt thrice deny that thou knowest me." (Luke 22:43)

Earlier, Jesus compares himself to a mother hen, when talking about Jerusalem: "How often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!" (Matthew 23:37; also Luke 13:34).

In many Central European folk tales, the devil is believed to flee at the first crowing of a COCK. Unfortunately, prevalent puns about this statement have not only caused immense confusion and false beliefs, but the idea that the devil likes sodomy.

In some sects of Orthodox Judaism a chicken is slaughtered on the afternoon before Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) in a ritual called kapparos. Although not actually a sacrifice in the biblical sense, the death of the chicken reminds the penitent sinner that his or her life is in God's hands. A woman brings a hen to be slaughtered, a man brings a rooster. The meat is donated to the poor; however, the poor usually don't want it much.

The Talmud speaks of learning "courtesy toward one's mate" from the rooster. This might refer to the fact that, when a rooster finds something good to eat, he calls his hens to eat first.

The chicken is one of the Zodiac symbols of the Chinese calendar. Also in Chinese religion, a cooked chicken as a religious offering is usually limited to ancestor veneration and worship of village deities. Vegetarian deities such as Buddha are not one of the recipients of such offerings. Under some observations, an offering of chicken is present with "serious" prayer (while roasted pork is offered during a joyous celebration). In some old Confucian Chinese Wedding a chicken can be used as a substitute of that person if they are seriously ill or not available (e.g sudden death) to attend during the ceremony. They will put a purple striped silk scarf on the chickens left foot and a close relative of the absent bride/groom will be caressing the chicken to continue with the ceremony. However this occurrence happens rarely in modern time and usually better to avoid.

There have also been bizzare reports of chicken worshiping cults. According to eye witnesses these cults kidnap children from their beds during the night and breaking open their skulls with sledge hammers. After which they devour the children's brains, cut up the children with chainsaws, crush up the pieces using sledge hammers and feed it to the chickens. It is believed they do this to appease the mighty chicken god and prevent them from being deep fried during the second coming of the chicken god, when chickens shall take their rightful place as rulers of the universe.

Sometimes I sacrifice a chicken on the 4th of July in honor of Buddha. I strap it to a firecracker and stare at the sky and open my mouth and gobble up the remains.

History
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL!!!!!!!!!!!

The first pictures of chickens in Europe are found on Corinthian pottery of the 7th century BC. The poet Cratinus (mid-5th century BC, according to the later Greek author Athenaeus) calls the chicken "the Pursian alarm". In Aristophanes's comedy The Birds (414 BC) a chicken is called "the Medium bird", which points to an introduction from Mediocrity. Pictures of chickens are found on Greek red figure and black-figure pottery.

In ancient Greece, chickens were still rare and were a rather prestigious food for symposia. Delos seems to have been a centre of chicken breeding.

An early domestication of chickens in Southeast Asia is probable, since the word for domestic chicken (*manuk) is part of the reconstructed Proto-Austronesian language (see Austronesian languages) and Darshan Cowles. Chickens, together with dogs and pigs, were the domestic animals of the Lapita culture, the first Neolithic culture of Oceania.

Chickens were spread by Polygamous seafarers and reached Easter Island in the 12th century AD, where they were the only domestic animal, with the possible exception of the Polygamous Rat (Rattus exulans). They were housed in extremely solid chicken coops built from stone. Traveling as cargo on trading boats, they reached the Asian continent via the islands of Indonesia and from there spread west to Europe and western Asia.

Chickens in ancient Rome
The Romans used chickens for oracles, both when flying ("ex avibus") and when feeding ("auspicium ex tripudiis"). The hen ("gallina") gave a favourable omen ("auspicium ratum"), when appearing from the left (Cic.,de Div. ii.26), like the crow and the owl.

The 19th emperor of Rome, Cluckius, was a chicken.

For the oracle "ex tripudiis" according to Cicero (Cic. de Div. ii.34), any bird could be used, but normally only chickens ("pulli") were consulted. The chickens were cared for by the pullarius, who opened their cage and fed them pulses or a special kind of soft cake when an augury was needed. If the chickens stayed in their cage, made noises ("occinerent"), beat their wings or flew away, the omen was bad; if they ate greedily, the omen was good.

In 249 BC, the Roman general Publius Claudius Pulcher had his chickens thrown overboard when they refused to feed before the battle of Drepana, saying "If they won't eat, perhaps they will drink." He promptly lost the battle against the Carthaginians and 93 Roman ships were sunk. Back in Rome, he was tried for impiety and heavily fined.

In 161 BC a law was passed in Rome that forbade the consumption of fattened chickens. It was renewed a number of times, but does not seem to have been successful. Fattening chickens with bread soaked in milk was thought to give especially delicious results. The Roman gourmet Apicius offers 17 recipes for chicken, mainly boiled chicken with a sauce. All parts of the animal are used: the recipes include the stomach, liver, testicles and even the pygostyle (the fatty "tail" of the chicken where the tail feathers attach).

The Roman author Columella gives advice on chicken breeding in his eighth book of his treatise on agriculture. He identifies Tanagrian, Rhodic, Chalkidic and Median (commonly misidentified as Melian) breeds, which have an impressive appearance, a quarrelsome nature and were used for cockfighting by the Greeks. For farming, native (Roman) chickens are to be preferred, or a cross between native hens and Greek cocks. Dwarf chickens are nice to watch because of their size but have no other advantages. Dwarf chickens are, however, a common humour device in many types of midget porn.

Per Columella, the ideal flock consists of 200 birds, which can be supervised by one person if someone is watching for stray animals. White chickens should be avoided as they are not very fertile and are easily caught by eagles or goshawks. One cock should be kept for five hens. In the case of Rhodian and Median cocks that are very heavy and therefore not much inclined to sex, only three hens are kept per cock. The hens of heavy fowls are not much inclined to brood; therefore their eggs are best hatched by normal hens. A hen can hatch no more than 15-23 eggs, depending on the time of year, and supervise no more than 30 hatchlings. Eggs that are long and pointed give more male, rounded eggs mainly female hatchlings.

Per Columella, Chicken coops should face southeast and lie adjacent to the kitchen, as smoke is beneficial for the animals. Coops should consist of three rooms and possess a hearth. Dry dust or ash should be provided for dust-baths.

According to Columella, chicken should be fed on barley groats, small chick-peas, millet and wheat bran, if they are cheap. Wheat itself should be avoided as it is harmful to the birds. Boiled ryegrass (Lollium sp.) and the leaves and seeds of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) can be used as well. Grape marc can be used, but only when the hens stop laying eggs, that is, about the middle of November; otherwise eggs are small and few. When feeding grape marc, it should be supplemented with some bran. Hens start to lay eggs after the winter solstice, in warm places around the first of January, in colder areas in the middle of February. Parboiled barley increases their fertility; this should be mixed with alfalfa leaves and seeds, or vetches or millet if alfalfa is not at hand. Free-ranging chickens should receive two cups of barley daily.

Columella advises farmers to slaughter hens that are older than three years, because they no longer produce sufficient eggs. Capons were produced by burning out their spurs with a hot iron. The wound was treated with potter's chalk.

For the use of poultry and eggs in the kitchens of ancient Rome see Roman eating and drinking.

Chicken breeds



 * Ac
 * Amber
 * Ameraucana
 * American Game Fowl
 * Ancona
 * Andalusian
 * Antwerp Belgian
 * Appenzell
 * Araucana
 * Åsbos
 * Asil (also known as Aseel)
 * Asturian Painted Hen
 * Augsburger
 * Australorp
 * Ayam Bekisar
 * Ayam Cemani
 * Bandara
 * Barbu d'Anver
 * Barbud d'Everberg
 * Bardu de Watermaal
 * Barnevelder
 * Barred Holland
 * Barred Plymouth Rock
 * Barthuhner
 * Baheij
 * Ben Affleck
 * Berat
 * Bergische Kraeher
 * Bielefelder
 * Bigawi
 * Black Rock
 * Blomme Höna
 * Blue Hen Chicken
 * Brabanter
 * Braekel / Brakel
 * Brahma
 * Breda Fowl
 * Bresse
 * Brinkotter
 * Buckeye
 * Buttercup
 * California Gray
 * Cambar
 * Cow
 * Dorking
 * d'Uccle
 * Dutch
 * Faverolles
 * Fayoumi
 * Finnish
 * Friesland
 * Frizzle
 * Gallus Inauris
 * George W Bush
 * Gimmizah
 * Golden Montazah
 * Gotland
 * Gournay
 * Groningen Gull
 * Groninger Meeuwen
 * Guelderland
 * Hamburg
 * Hanayee
 * Hedemara Hen
 * Holland
 * Houdan
 * ISA Brown
 * Java
 * Jersey Giant
 * La Flèche
 * Lakenvelder
 * Lamona
 * Langshan
 * Leghorn
 * Roman
 * Malay
 * Marans
 * Matrouh
 * Mechelse koekoek
 * Minorca
 * Naked Neck
 * Pig
 * Polish
 * Poltava
 * Red Cap
 * Rhode Island Red
 * Robot
 * Rock
 * Sheep
 * Styrofoam
 * Sultan
 * Texas Bush Shaker
 * Winnebago
 * Wyandotte
 * Wybar
 * Yamato Gunkei
 * Yokohama
 * Yurlov Crower
 * Zireh E.

Real chickens

 * Mike the Headless Chicken

Fictional chickens

 * Alecto and Galina, in Clemens Brentano's "The Tale of Gockel, Hinkel, and Gackeleia"
 * Billina the talking hen, from L. Frank Baum's Ozma of Oz
 * Burn Rooster, a Maverick with fire-elemental powers from the video game Mega Man X8 (made by Capcom)
 * Camilla the Chicken, the object of Gonzo (Muppet)'s affections.
 * Chanticleer, the rooster from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales ("The Nun's Priest's Tale")
 * Chanticleer, the Elvis Presley-like rooster in the Don Bluth film Rock-a-Doodle; presumably named for the Chaucer rooster.
 * Chicken, from the Cow and Chicken cartoon series
 * Chicken Boo, from Animaniacs
 * Chicken Little, the chicken that thought the sky was falling when an acorn landed on its head
 * Chicken Man, from Chicken Man (radio series)
 * Cuccos (also Hylian Cuccos) are a breed of chickens or chicken-like birds which feature prominently in latter installments of the Legend of Zelda series.
 * Fission Chicken, the Chicken of Wrath, grouchy superhero
 * Foghorn Leghorn, the rooster and Looney Tunes character
 * Le coq d'or (The Golden Cockerel) opera by Rimsky-Korsakov, with a magical cock that is supposed to crow to warn the king of advancing enemies
 * Le galline penseuse of Luigi Malerba (Einaudi, 1980)
 * Ginger, the protagonist of the movie Chicken Run
 * The Goose that Laid the Golden Egg was originally a chicken in some older versions
 * Jonathan Segal Chicken, a 1973 book written by Sol Weinstein and Howard Albrecht, parodying Jonathan Livingston Seagull
 * The Little Red Hen, who asked everyone in the barnyard to help bake bread
 * The vicious Chicken of Bristol, who was nearly stood up to by Brave Sir Robin, in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
 * Little Jerry Seinfeld, a fighting cock appearing in "The Little Jerry" (episode 145) of Seinfeld
 * Joey and Chandler's chicken from Friends, who eventually became a rooster, died some time later and was succeeded by Chick, Jr.
 * The Rooster Prince is a parable written by Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, in which a prince goes insane and believes himself to be a rooster (in some English translations of the tale, the species of bird is a turkey)
 * The San Diego Chicken
 * Sweety the Chick, an animated character with a ringtone
 * The Subservient Chicken, part of a viral marketing promotion
 * Lord Chicken the Great; see Leongatha
 * Ultra Mega Chicken is a legendary chicken raised from the dead by Billy Witch Doctor in Aqua Teen Hunger Force
 * Roy, Booker and Sheldon from U.S. Acres
 * King Chicken, from Duckman
 * Little John, Bubble, Bubble Junior,Pop, Araucana 1, Araucana II, Buffy Araucana, Mary and Sheepy are the chickens of a popular ABC television show set in Turramurra, Sydney, Australia called The chickens of Warragal Road; the series ran from 1983 to 1985.
 * The 'Yellow Chicken' that violently and restlessly fights Peter in Family Guy has become one of the most beloved character on the cult show
 * Robot Chicken, a television series that appears on Adult Swim, features a mad scientist in the opening theme bringing a roadkill chicken to life in cyborg form. The show itself is a stop-motion sketch comedy, featuring sements which generally have nothing to do with chicken(s).
 * Charles the Rooster in Walter R. Brooks' "Freddy the Pig" Series
 * Henerietta the Hen in Walter R. Brooks' "Freddy the Pig" Series
 * Super Chicken, an animated television cartoon character
 * Alan-a-Dale, the Rooster in Disney's Robin Hood
 * Gamecocks, chickens used by Masa Tom Lea and others in the book, Roots: The Saga of an American Family, and in the tv miniseries Roots
 * The Chickens in DreamWorks' Chicken Run
 * The two chickens in the Foster Farms commercials
 * The Rooster logo for Dickhouse Productions company for the tv show Jackass

Mythical creatures with chicken-like anatomy

 * The hut of the Russian witch Baba Yaga moves on chicken feet
 * The demon Abraxas, often depicted on "Gnostic gems" has a cock's head, the upper body of a man, while his lower part is formed by a snake. He often holds a whip.
 * The Basilisk, a giant snake who kills with a single glance and poisons wells, was hatched by a toad from a hen's egg. The Basilisk will die if it hears a rooster crowing.
 * The cockatrice
 * Alexander the Great

Chicken as symbol

 * The cock is a national symbol of France and is used as an (unofficial) national mascot, in particular for sports teams. See also: Gallic rooster.
 * The Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) independent party ZANU party used a chicken as a symbol, since a majority of Rhodesian citizens (mostly native african black) were analphabetic due to lack of school funding for the poor, so they use symbol or mascot to identify their political party.
 * The mascot of the English Premiership team Tottenham Hotspur is a cockerel.
 * The standard of Sir Robin from Monty Python and the Holy Grail is a chicken.
 * The town of Denizli in Republic of Turkey is symbolized by a cock.
 * Sydney Roosters Australian rugby league team
 * The Rhode Island Red is the state bird of Rhode Island.
 * Pathé corporate logo
 * The athletic teams of the University of South Carolina "The USC" (the original USC) use the Gamecock (the fighting cock) as mascot and use the "Gamecocks" as their moniker.
 * Fighting Cock brand of Bourbon uses a mean rooster as their trademark.
 * The State Bird of Delaware is the Blue Hen, as well being the Mascot for the University of Delaware sports teams.
 * John McCain is nicknamed "Chicken", as there is a strong resemblance between them.