Moses
Leviticus 11:14ESV·traditional attribution

the kite, the falcon of any kind,

Adam Clarke Methodist

The vulture - דאה daah, from the root to fly, and therefore more probably the kite or glede, from its remarkable property of gliding or sailing with expanded wings through the air. The דאה daah is a different bird from the דיה daiyah, which signifies the vulture. See Bochart, vol. iii., col. 195. The kite - איה aiyah, thought by some to be the vulture, by others the merlin.

Keil & Delitzsch Lutheran

Lev 11:13-14 (cf. Deu 14:11-18). Of birds, twenty varieties are prohibited, including the bat, but without any common mark being given; though they consist almost exclusively of birds which live upon flesh or carrion, and are most of them natives of Western Asia. The list commences with the eagle, as the king of the birds. Nesher embraces all the species of eagles proper.

Commenting on Leviticus 11:13-14

Matthew Henry Presbyterian

Here is, 1. A general rule concerning fishes, which were clean and which not. All that had fins and scales they might eat, and only those odd sorts of water-animals that have not were forbidden, Lev 11:9, Lev 11:10. The ancients accounted fish the most delicate food (so far were they from allowing it on fasting-days, or making it an instance of mortification to eat...

Commenting on Leviticus 11:9-19